論文

国際誌
2021年3月17日

Cryptococcus gattii evades CD11b-mediated fungal recognition by coating itself with capsular polysaccharides.

European journal of immunology
  • Keigo Ueno
  • ,
  • Yoshiko Otani
  • ,
  • Nao Yanagihara
  • ,
  • Makoto Urai
  • ,
  • Akiko Nagamori
  • ,
  • Miyuki Sato-Fukushima
  • ,
  • Kiminori Shimizu
  • ,
  • Saito Noriko
  • ,
  • Yoshitsugu Miyazaki

51
9
開始ページ
2281
終了ページ
2295
記述言語
英語
掲載種別
研究論文(学術雑誌)
DOI
10.1002/eji.202049042

Cryptococcus gattii is a capsular pathogenic fungus causing life-threatening cryptococcosis. Although the capsular polysaccharides (CPs) of C. gattii are considered as virulence factors, the physiological significance of CP biosynthesis and of CPs themselves is not fully understood, with many conflicting data reported. First, we demonstrated that CAP gene deletant of C. gattii completely lacked capsule layer and its virulence, and that the strain was susceptible to host-related factors, including oxidizing, hypoxic, and hypotrophic conditions in vitro. Extracellular CPs recovered from culture supernatant bound specifically to C. gattii acapsular strains, not to other fungi and immune cells, and rendered them the immune escape effects. In fact, dendritic cells (DCs) did not efficiently uptake the CP-treated acapsular strains, which possessed no visible capsule layer, and a decreased amount of phosphorylated proteins and cytokine levels after the stimulation. DCs recognized C. gattii acapuslar cells via an immune receptor CD11b- and Syk-related pathway; however, CD11b did not bind to CP-treated acapsular cells. These results suggested that CPs support immune evasion by coating antigens on C. gattii and blocking the interaction between CD11b and C. gattii cells. Here, we describe the importance of CPs in pathogenicity and immune evasion mechanisms of C. gattii. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

リンク情報
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.202049042
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33728652
ID情報
  • DOI : 10.1002/eji.202049042
  • PubMed ID : 33728652

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