Edgerton M, Koshlukova S E, Lo T E, Chrzan B G, Straubinger R M, Raj P A
Department of Oral Biology, State University of New York, Buffalo, New York 14214, USA.
J Biol Chem. 1998 Aug 7;273(32):20438-47. doi: 10.1074/jbc.273.32.20438.
Candida albicans is the predominant species of yeast isolated from patients with oral candidiasis, which is frequently a symptom of human immunodeficiency virus infection and is a criterion for staging and progression of AIDS. Salivary histatins (Hsts) are potent in vitro antifungal agents and have great promise as therapeutic agents in humans with oral candidiasis. The molecular mechanisms by which Hsts kill yeast cells are not known. We report here, that unlike other antimicrobial proteins, Hsts do not display lytic activities to lipid membranes, measured by release and dequenching of the fluorescent dye calcein. Analysis of the magnitude and time course of Hst-induced calcein release from C. albicans cells further showed that loss of cell integrity was a secondary effect following cell death, rather than the result of primary disruption of the yeast cell membrane. 125I-Hst 5 binding studies indicated that C. albicans expressed a class of saturable binding sites (KD = 1 microM), numbering 8.6 x 10(5) sites/cell. Both Hst 3 and Hst 4 competed for these binding sites with similar affinities, which is consistent with the micromolar concentration of Hsts required for candidacidal activity. Specific 125I-Hst 5 binding was not detected to C. albicans spheroplasts, which were 14-fold less susceptible to Hst 5 killing, compared with intact cells in candidacidal assays. In overlay experiments, 125I-Hst 5 bound to a 67-kDa protein detected in C. albicans whole cell lysates and crude membrane fractions, but not in the yeast cell wall fraction. Consistent with the overlay data, cross-linking of 125I-Hst 5 to C. albicans resulted in the appearance of a specific 73-kDa 125I-Hst 5-containing complex that was not detected in the cell wall. 125I-Hst 5-binding protein of similar size was also observed in susceptible S. cerevisiae strain TI#20. This is the first description of Hst 5 binding sites on C. albicans which mediate cell killing and identification of a 67-kDa yeast Hst 5-binding protein. The binding characteristics of Hst 5 are in agreement with the observed potency of its biological effect and provide crucial information to the use of Hst 5 as a therapeutic agent. The presence of a specific C. albicans Hst 5-binding protein provides further insight into the potential mechanism of yeast killing and suggests a basis for differential activity between yeast killing and the nontoxic nature of Hsts to humans.
白色念珠菌是从口腔念珠菌病患者中分离出的主要酵母菌种,口腔念珠菌病常是人类免疫缺陷病毒感染的一种症状,也是艾滋病分期和病情进展的一个标准。唾液组蛋白(Hsts)是体外有效的抗真菌剂,有望成为治疗人类口腔念珠菌病的药物。Hsts杀死酵母细胞的分子机制尚不清楚。我们在此报告,与其他抗菌蛋白不同,通过荧光染料钙黄绿素的释放和去淬灭测量,Hsts对脂质膜不显示裂解活性。对Hst诱导的钙黄绿素从白色念珠菌细胞中释放的幅度和时间进程的分析进一步表明,细胞完整性的丧失是细胞死亡后的继发效应,而不是酵母细胞膜原发性破坏的结果。125I-Hst 5结合研究表明,白色念珠菌表达一类可饱和结合位点(KD = 1 microM),每个细胞有8.6 x 10(5)个位点。Hst 3和Hst 4以相似的亲和力竞争这些结合位点,这与杀念珠菌活性所需的Hsts微摩尔浓度一致。在杀念珠菌试验中,未检测到125I-Hst 5与白色念珠菌原生质体的特异性结合,原生质体对Hst 5杀伤的敏感性比完整细胞低14倍。在覆盖实验中,125I-Hst 5与白色念珠菌全细胞裂解物和粗膜组分中检测到的一种67-kDa蛋白结合,但在酵母细胞壁组分中未检测到。与覆盖数据一致,125I-Hst 5与白色念珠菌交联导致出现一种特异性的73-kDa含125I-Hst 5的复合物,在细胞壁中未检测到。在敏感的酿酒酵母菌株TI#20中也观察到类似大小的125I-Hst 5结合蛋白。这是首次描述白色念珠菌上介导细胞杀伤的Hst 5结合位点,并鉴定出一种67-kDa酵母Hst 5结合蛋白。Hst 5的结合特性与其观察到的生物学效应效力一致,并为将Hst 5用作治疗药物提供了关键信息。白色念珠菌特异性Hst 5结合蛋白的存在进一步深入了解了酵母杀伤的潜在机制,并为酵母杀伤与Hsts对人类无毒性质之间的差异活性提供了基础。