The Candida glabrata adhesin Epa1p causes adhesion, phagocytosis, and cytokine secretion by innate immune cells.

FEMS Yeast Res

Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, 9 Cambridge Center, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

Published: June 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • Candida glabrata is emerging as a significant fungal pathogen, yet little is understood about its interaction with the human immune system, especially compared to Candida albicans.
  • The Epa1p protein on C. glabrata mediates nonopsonic binding to human macrophages, leading to immune response activation, although C. glabrata itself avoids phagocytosis.
  • In mouse models, Epa1p binding requires Dectin-1 blocking, highlighting differences in immune responses between humans and mice and pointing to a unique recognition mechanism for fungal binding.

Article Abstract

While Candida albicans is the most significant fungal pathogen for humans, Candida glabrata accounts for an increasing number of infections. Little is known about how C. glabrata interacts with the innate immune system, the first line of defense against such organisms. The C. glabrata adhesin Epa1p was previously shown to bind mammalian epithelial cells. We hypothesized that Epa1p mediates unique, nonopsonic binding to macrophages, leading to induction of immune responses. We found that Epa1p mediated adhesion by both C. glabrata (Cg) and transformed Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Sc(EPA1) ) to human macrophage-like cells, including Thp1 and U937 lines, and donor PBMCs. Adhesion was distinct from described mechanisms such as Dectin-1. Epa1p expression was necessary and sufficient for S. cerevisiae binding and phagocytosis, the latter of which was actin-mediated. Sc(EPA1) induced inflammatory cytokine production (IL-8 and TNF-α) by human PBMC-derived macrophages. Despite expressing Epa1p and binding to macrophages, Cg avoided phagocytosis and cytokine induction. In contrast to human results, in murine cell models (RAW264.7, J774A.1, and C57BL/6-derived cells), Epa1p-mediated binding was only revealed after blocking the Dectin-1 system. Recognition of Epa1p represents a novel mechanism by which human innate immune cells bind fungi, and for Sc(EPA1) results in phagocytosis and subsequent cytokine production.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1567-1364.2011.00785.xDOI Listing

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