Caspofungin induced cell wall changes of Candida species influences macrophage interactions

Louise A. Walker*, Carol Munro

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Citations (Scopus)
8 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Candida species are known to differ in their ability to cause infection and have been shown to display varied susceptibilities to antifungal drugs. Treatment with the echinocandin, caspofungin, leads to compensatory alterations in the fungal cell wall. This study was performed to compare the structure and composition of the cell walls of different Candida species alone and in response to caspofungin treatment, and to evaluate how changes at the fungal cell surface affects interactions with macrophages. We demonstrated that the length of the outer fibrillar layer varied between Candida species and that, in most cases, reduced fibril length correlated with increased exposure of β-1,3-glucan on the cell surface. C. glabrata and C. guilliermondii, which had naturally more β-1,3-glucan exposed on the cell surface, were phagocytosed significantly more efficiently by J774 macrophages. Treatment with caspofungin resulted in increased exposure of chitin and β-1,3-glucan on the surface of the majority of Candida species isolates that were tested, with the exception of C. glabrata and C. parapsilosis isolates. This increase in exposure of the inner cell wall polysaccharides, in most cases, correlated with reduced uptake by macrophages and in turn, a decrease in production of TNFα. Here we show that differences in the exposure of cell wall carbohydrates and variations in the repertoire of covalently attached surface proteins of different Candida species contributes to their recognition by immune cells.
Original languageEnglish
Article number164
JournalFrontiers in cellular and infection microbiology
Volume10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 May 2020

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgements
We thank Gillian Milne from the University of Aberdeen Microscopy and Histology facility for help with EM, Dr David Stead (Aberdeen Proteomics) for proteomics analysis and Prof. Gordon Brown for Fc:Dectin1. We thank Dr Judith Bain and Prof. Lars Erwig for advice on the macrophage assays.

Funding
We acknowledge funding from the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy and the Medical Research Council (G0400284).

Keywords

  • Chitin
  • β-1,3-glucan
  • GPI-anchored proteins
  • fungal cell wall
  • echinocandin
  • macrophages
  • immune response
  • beta-1,3-glucan
  • GLABRATA
  • BETA-GLUCAN
  • IMMUNE RECOGNITION
  • chitin
  • ECHINOCANDIN RESISTANCE
  • CYTOKINE/CHEMOKINE PRODUCTION
  • MANNOSE RECEPTOR
  • CHITIN
  • ALBICANS
  • PROTEINS
  • FKS MUTATIONS
  • 3-glucan
  • β-1

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