Regulation of innate immune response to Candida albicans infections by αMβ2-Pra1p interaction.

Infect Immun

Joseph J. Jacobs Center for Thrombosis and Vascular Biology and Department of Molecular Cardiology, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA.

Published: April 2011

Candida albicans is a common opportunistic fungal pathogen and is the leading cause of invasive fungal diseases in immunocompromised individuals. The induction of cell-mediated immunity to C. albicans is one of the main tasks of cells of the innate immune system, and in vitro evidence suggests that integrin α(M)β₂ (CR3, Mac-1, and CD11b/CD18) is the principal leukocyte receptor involved in recognition of the fungus. Using α(M)β₂-KO mice and mutated strains of C. albicans in two models of murine candidiasis, we demonstrate that neutrophils derived from mice deficient in α(M)β₂ have a reduced ability to kill C. albicans and that the deficient mice themselves exhibit increased susceptibility to fungal infection. Disruption of the PRA1 gene of C. albicans, the primary ligand for α(M)β₂, protects the fungus against leukocyte killing in vitro and in vivo, impedes the innate immune response to the infection, and increases fungal virulence and organ invasion in vivo. Thus, recognition of pH-regulated antigen 1 protein (Pra1p) by α(M)β₂ plays a pivotal role in determining fungal virulence and host response and protection against C. albicans infection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3067562PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/IAI.00650-10DOI Listing

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