Lipid-mediated fungal pathogenesis

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $659,883 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT The long-term goal of this proposal is to study mechanism(s) of pathogenicity of Cryptococcus neoformans (Cn) focusing on how Cn glycolipids regulate fungal virulence and the host immune response. Cn is a fungal pathogen that, upon entering the lung and disseminating through the bloodstream, causes a life- threatening meningo-encephalitis in susceptible patients, leading to high morbidity and mortality. Current therapies for this disease can have intolerable and dose-limiting side effects.1 Thus, new treatment strategies are warranted to better control the high mortality associated with cryptococcosis. Although vaccines have been hailed as one of the greatest achievements in public health during the past century, the development of safe and efficacious vaccines against cryptococcosis, and fungal infections in general, has been a major hurdle mainly due to the lack of knowledge about the mechanisms that underpin protective immunity. Additionally, fungal vaccines need to be effective also in conditions of immunodeficiency, such as CD4+ T cell lymphopenia in AIDS patients, because immunodeficient patients are the most susceptible to cryptococcosis and other invasive fungal infections. In previous studies, we deleted the sterol-glucosidase 1 (Sgl1) gene and the resulting mutant (Dsgl1) is highly enriched in sterol glucosides (SGs), which are otherwise not detectable in wild-type (WT) Cn cells.2 SGs are glycolipids present in a variety of fungi and other microorganisms and are prone to stimulate host immunity.3-5 During the previous funding cycle, we showed that Cn Dsgl1 mutant is not pathogenic in a mouse model and, upon intranasal administration, the mutant cells are rapidly eliminated in the lung environment.2 Very interestingly, mice receiving Cn Dsgl1 mutant are now protected when challenged with virulent Cn WT and this protection is achieved even when mice are CD4+ or CD8+ T cell depleted, mimicking the HIV+ host (Fig.12 and2). We validated the role of Sgl1 in second fungal pathogen, Aspergillus fumigatus (Af). The Af DsglA is also not virulent (Fig. 9) and able to protect against a secondary Af WT infection (Fig. 11). Importantly, we initiated a high throughput screening and found small molecules that inhibit Sgl1 or SglA activity in vitro, accumulates SGs in fungal cells (Fig. 6), exert in vitro antifungal activity against Cn and Af in minimum media with low glucose concentrations (Figs. 2 and 3), and block the dissemination of Cn to the brain (Fig. 5), mimicking the phenotypes observed with the respective Dsgl1 or DsglA mutants. In addition, a key characteristic of Cn is its polysaccharide capsule, mainly made of glucuronic acid, xylose and mannose (GXM). Very interestingly, we found that deletion of GXM totally abrogates the protective phenotype of Cn Dsgl1.6 In fact, the administration of the Cn Dcap59/Dsgl1 double mutant does not protect against a secondary infection (Fig. 8). Based on these observations, we hypothesize that...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10414620
Project number
2R01AI125770-06A1
Recipient
STATE UNIVERSITY NEW YORK STONY BROOK
Principal Investigator
Maurizio Del Poeta
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$659,883
Award type
2
Project period
2016-07-01 → 2026-08-31