Abstract
Phospholipase is an important virulence factor for pathogenic fungi. In this study, we demonstrate the following: (i) the Paracoccidioides brasiliensis pld gene is preferentially expressed in mycelium cells, (ii) the plb1 gene is mostly up-regulated by infection after 6 h of co-infection of MH-S cells or during BALB/c mice lung infection, (iii) during lung infection, plb1, plc and pld gene expression are significantly increased 6-48 h post-infection compared to 56 days after infection, strongly suggesting that phospholipases play a role in the early events of infection, but not during the chronic stages of pulmonary infection by P. brasiliensis.
host-pathogen interaction; Paracoccidioides brasiliensis ; pathogenicity; phospholipases
Paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM) is an endemic systemic granulomatous mycosis in Latin America that is caused by the thermoregulated dimorphic fungus Paracoccidioides brasiliensis. Infection most likely occurs due to inhalation of airborne propagules derived from the mycelial saprophytic form of the fungus. Once in the lungs, P. brasiliensis cells undergo a dimorphic transition to the yeast form, an essential step for the establishment of the infection, and these cells can be contained in a granuloma or can disseminate to the rest of the body. Occasionally, the yeast cells are eradicated by the immune system (Brummer et al. 1993).
A number of potential virulence factors and events are important for the establishment of a successful infection by invasive fungi, including dimorphism, adherence to host cells, cell wall composition and enzyme production, e.g., proteases, lipases and phospholipases (PLs) (San-Blas et al. 2000, Mendes-Giannini et al. 2004). In general, PLs, which include PLA, PLB, PLC and PLD, are considered virulence factors for pathogenic fungi, including Candida albicans (Mukherjee et al. 2001) and Cryptococcus neoformans (Cox et al. 2001, Santangelo et al. 2004, Ganendren et al. 2006). We previously reported the differential expression of PLB genes during in vitro P. brasiliensis mycelium-to-yeast (M-Y) transition (Tavares et al. 2007) and the importance of PLB in binding and internalising yeast to macrophage surfaces (Soares et al. 2010). In addition, a PLC capable of selectively hydrolysing glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) membrane anchors has been detected in P. brasiliensis (Heise et al. 1995). Two open reading frames with high sequence homology to phosphatidylinositol-specific PLC (plc) and PLD (pld) of Aspergillus nidulans and Aspergillus oryzae, respectively, have been identified in the P. brasiliensis transcriptome (Felipe et al. 2005). Although PLs (A, B1, C and D) have been identified in P. brasiliensis (Felipe et al. 2005), their potential role in virulence has not been fully defined.
To advance our understanding of the molecular role and mechanism of action of PLs in the initial steps of infection and fungal adaptation to the host, we analysed the expression of the P. brasiliensis genes plb1, plc and pld during infection of alveolar macrophages, during acute and chronic stages of lung infection in BALB/c mice and during the P. brasiliensis M-Y transition, which is an initial and fundamental step in the infectious process.
P. brasiliensis isolate 18 (ATCC 32069) was used in all experiments. The yeast phase was maintained in vitro by sub-culturing and growing at 36ºC on Fava-Netto medium for seven days before replating. The viability of fungal cells was determined using Janus Green B vital dye (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany). Only cells with viability greater than 90% were used. Differentiation was performed in liquid medium (Fava-Netto) by changing the culture temperature from 25-36ºC for the M-Y transition (Silva et al. 1994). Samples were collected at 0 h, 2 h, 6 h, 12 h, 24 h and 48 h. All experiments were performed in triplicate. RNA was extracted from cells pooled from three independent experiments using the TriZOL(r) method (Invitrogen Corp, Carlsbad, CA, USA).
Alveolar macrophages were infected as described by Tavares et al. (2007). Extracellular and weakly adherent fungi were removed 6 h after infection by washing with pre-warmed RPMI-1640 tissue culture medium (Sigma Chemical, USA). Macrophages were then lysed with a guanidine thiocyanate-based solution and intact fungi were harvested by centrifugation, followed immediately by TriZOL(r) extraction (Invitrogen Corp, Carlsbad, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Groups of 10 male BALB/c mice (6-8 weeks old) were anaesthetised and infected i.v. with 1 × 106 viable yeast cells in 50 µL phosphate buffered saline (Cano et al. 1997). The animals were euthanised at different times, before infection and during early (6 h, 24 h and 48 h after infection) and late periods (56 days after infection) of infection. Total RNA was isolated from lungs pooled from five-10 animals from each group at each time point of infection using the TriZOL(r) method (Invitrogen Corp, Carlsbad, CA, USA). RNA (1 µg) treated with RNase-free DNase I (Invitrogen Corp, Carlsbad, CA, USA) in the presence of RNase inhibitor was reverse transcribed using an oligo(dT)12-18 primer and submitted to real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Amplification assays were performed with a 7900HT Sequence Detection System ABI PRISM instrument (Applied Biosystems, Carlsbad, CA, USA) in 12-µL reactions containing 0.4 µM each primer, 6 µL SYBR Green PCR Master mix (2 x) and 0.2 µL template cDNA. After initial denaturation at 95ºC for 10 min, amplifications were performed for 40 cycles at 95ºC for 15 s and 60ºC for 1 min. The following oligonucleotide primers were used (5'-3'): PLB (plb1) {plb1F- GCAATGCAAGGGAAGAAAGA; plb1R- CGATCCGAGGAACTCTAACG}, PLC (plc) {plcF- ACCAGATCTGAACCAGCCGTTGAT, plcR- TCGTCTTTCAGCTCACGCATCCAT}, PLD (pld) {pldF- TCAGGGCGTTGGAATAGCGTAAGT and pldR- ACTGGTTCATAGTTGGGAGTCGGT}. The comparative crossing threshold method (Livak & Schmittgen 2001) employing the constitutive P. brasiliensis α-tubulin gene was used to normalise the expression value of each gene of interest. Real time reverse transcription-PCR experiments were performed in triplicate for all analysed genes. Statistical comparisons were performed by ANOVA and the Tukey-Kramer test. All values are reported as the mean ± standard error of the mean with significance assumed at p < 0.01.
Analysis of P. brasiliensis PL gene expression during the dimorphic transition - The infection process of P. brasiliensis is initiated by aerially dispersed mycelia propagules, which differentiate into the yeast parasitic phase in human lungs. A temperature shift from 26-37ºC is the only condition known to trigger the M-Y transition in P. brasiliensis. This morphogenic transition has been postulated to be important in the pathogenicity of this fungus because fungal strains that are unable to differentiate into yeast cells are not virulent (San-Blas et al. 2000, Felipe et al. 2005).
Differences in the PL transcription level during the M-Y transition could already be observed 1 h after the temperature was shifted from 25-36ºC, when most cells were still in the mycelial form (A in Figure). We previously followed the different steps of the dimorphic transition and established parameters to quantify the different morphotypes that are produced during the M-Y transition, which revealed that 5% of the morphological units are already in yeast form 48 h after the temperature shift (Silva et al. 1994). Up-regulation of the plb1 (5.67-fold) and plc (17-fold) genes was observed in vitro as early as 1 h after the temperature shift from 25-36°C, with similar transcript levels observed 24 h after the temperature shift as well as in the yeast stage (A in Figure). During the M-Y transition, we also observed a 2.75-fold higher yield of pld transcripts in mycelial cells cultured at 25ºC compared with yeast cells cultured at 36ºC (A in Figure). This finding is consistent with evidence from studies in C. albicans indicating enhanced levels of pld1 transcripts during the yeast to hyphal transition, suggesting that a prominent part of the phosphatidic acid and diacylglycerol pools is produced by PLD1 and that the level of these components is important for morphological transitions under certain conditions in C. albicans (Hube et al. 2001).
Real time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Analysis of phospholipase (PL) gene ( plb 1, plc , and pld ) transcript level during Paracoccidioides brasiliensis dimorphic mycelium-to-yeast (M-Y) transition. Mycelial cells grown for 48 h at 26ºC were submitted to temperature shift to 35ºC to induce their differentiation into yeast cells. Samples were collected at 1 h, 2 h, 6 h, 12 h, and 24 h and yeast cells grown at 35ºC. Results are expressed as means and standard error (SEM) of three technical replicates. RNA was isolated from pooled three independent experiments. Î"CT values were used for statistical analysis (Livak & Schmittgen 2001) using P. brasiliensis α-tubulin gene as the internal control {**: p < 0.01 (ANOVA, Tukey-Kramer test)} (A). P. brasiliensis yeast cells 6 h after MH-S cell interaction. In all experiments, MH-S cells and opsonised yeast cells were incubated at a yeast-to-macrophage ratio of 1:5 at 37ºC in an atmosphere of 5% CO 2 , as described. Results are expressed as means and SEM of three technical replicates. RNA was isolated from pooled three independent experiments. The expression of each target gene is presented as fold change normalised to the reference gene α-tubulin and relative to the respective yeast PL genes obtain from yeast cells grown on Fava-Netto medium at 35ºC (B). P. brasiliensis yeast cells during BALB/c mice lung infection. Results are expressed as the means and SEM of three technical replicates. Five-10 mice per time point were used. The expression of each target gene is presented as fold change normalised to the reference gene α-tubulin and relative to the respective yeast PL genes obtain from yeast cells grown on Fava-Netto medium at 35ºC {**: p < 0.01 (ANOVA, Tukey-Kramer test)} (C).
Phospholipase gene modulation during infection of macrophage cells and murine model by P. brasiliensis - We used a 6 h period for infection because this period represents an early time point of fungal cell internalisation by macrophages, as demonstrated by Tavares et al. (2007). Analysis of the gene expression of internalised P. brasiliensis revealed that the plb1, plc and pld genes were up-regulated in P. brasiliensis yeast cells after 6 h of interaction with MH-S cells compared with yeast cells cultured at 36ºC (B in Figure).
To investigate whether the increase in PL gene expression in vitro also occurs during infection in vivo, we analysed PL gene expression during early and late infection. In the murine model, plb1 expression is higher 6-24 h after infection than in yeast cells cultured at 36ºC (C in Figure). Furthermore, we observed an increase in plc gene expression, while the levels of pld gene expression did not change.
Our data strongly suggest that PLB could be an important virulence factor for P. brasiliensis during the early events of pulmonary infection (B, C in Figure). Soares et al. (2010) reported similar observations for P. brasiliensis, confirming the participation of PLB1 in the mechanism of fungal evasion, which interferes with the host immune response. This observation is also consistent with other pathogenic fungal studies, including those of C. neoformans, in which PLB is necessary for the early events of pulmonary infection and for dissemination from the lung via the lymphatic system and blood (Ganendren et al. 2006). A similar role for plb1 may be of importance in the acute stage of PCM in mice because the infection is also contracted by inhalation.
P. brasiliensis infection also induces secretion of the hydrolase PLB1 in several infectious disease models (Soares et al. 2010). Previous studies have implicated secreted PLB1 in the establishment of pulmonary infection and demonstrated that it is essential for the dissemination of cryptococci to the brain and other sites (Cox et al. 2001, Santangelo et al. 2004, Ganendren et al. 2006). Cell-associated PLB1 is concentrated in lipid raft membranes, where it is attached via a GPI anchor. PLC1 regulates the release and secretion of PLB1 from its GPI anchor in the cell membrane and activates at least one signal transduction pathway (PKC/MAPK) (Chayakulkeeree et al. 2008). This observation, coupled with the enhanced levels of plc transcripts during P. brasiliensis lung infection, led us to conclude that PLC could have the same function in this infection model.
The relevance of PLB production in PCM is related to the fact that fungal PLB functions in the regulation of the immune response by liberating fatty acid precursors (arachidonic acid, linolenic acid or eicosanopentaenoic acid) for host eicosanoid synthesis (Noverr et al. 2003). Eicosanoids are potent regulators of host immune responses and include prostaglandins and leukotrienes produced by fungi in the lungs, which may also play a role in modulating the T-helper 1-2 balance of the immune response and promote eosinophil recruitment or survival of the fungus in the lungs (Noverr et al. 2003, Calich et al. 2008).
In conclusion, our findings strongly suggest that the PL gene family of P. brasiliensis is important for the pathogenesis of PCM and demonstrate that the genes of this family are differentially expressed in murine and tissue culture models.
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Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
Sept 2013
History
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Received
17 Aug 2012 -
Accepted
07 June 2013