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Candida albicans Shed Msb2 and Host Mucins Affect the Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Hst 5

Salivary Histatin 5 (Hst 5) is an antimicrobial peptide that exhibits potent antifungal activity towards Candida albicans, the causative agent of oral candidiasis. However, it exhibits limited activity in vivo, largely due to inactivation by salivary components of both host and pathogen origin. Prot...

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Autores principales: Puri, Sumant, Friedman, Justin, Saraswat, Darpan, Kumar, Rohitashw, Li, Rui, Ruszaj, Donna, Edgerton, Mira
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4693163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26529023
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens4040752
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author Puri, Sumant
Friedman, Justin
Saraswat, Darpan
Kumar, Rohitashw
Li, Rui
Ruszaj, Donna
Edgerton, Mira
author_facet Puri, Sumant
Friedman, Justin
Saraswat, Darpan
Kumar, Rohitashw
Li, Rui
Ruszaj, Donna
Edgerton, Mira
author_sort Puri, Sumant
collection PubMed
description Salivary Histatin 5 (Hst 5) is an antimicrobial peptide that exhibits potent antifungal activity towards Candida albicans, the causative agent of oral candidiasis. However, it exhibits limited activity in vivo, largely due to inactivation by salivary components of both host and pathogen origin. Proteins secreted by C. albicans during infection such as secreted aspartyl proteases (Saps) and shed mucin Msb2 can reduce Hst 5 activity; and human salivary mucins, while suggested to protect Hst 5 from proteolytic degradation, can entrap peptides into mucin gels, thereby reducing bioavailability. We show here that Sap6 that is secreted during hyphal growth reduces Hst 5 activity, most likely a result of proteolytic degradation of Hst 5 since this effect is abrogated with heat inactivated Sap 6. We further show that just like C. albicans shedding Msb2, mammalian mucins, fetuin and porcine gut mucin (that is related to salivary mucins), also reduce Hst 5 activity. However, we identify mucin-like protein-induced changes in C. albicans cell morphology and aggregation patterns, suggesting that the effect of such proteins on Hst 5 cannot be interpreted independently of their effect on yeast cells.
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spelling pubmed-46931632016-01-06 Candida albicans Shed Msb2 and Host Mucins Affect the Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Hst 5 Puri, Sumant Friedman, Justin Saraswat, Darpan Kumar, Rohitashw Li, Rui Ruszaj, Donna Edgerton, Mira Pathogens Article Salivary Histatin 5 (Hst 5) is an antimicrobial peptide that exhibits potent antifungal activity towards Candida albicans, the causative agent of oral candidiasis. However, it exhibits limited activity in vivo, largely due to inactivation by salivary components of both host and pathogen origin. Proteins secreted by C. albicans during infection such as secreted aspartyl proteases (Saps) and shed mucin Msb2 can reduce Hst 5 activity; and human salivary mucins, while suggested to protect Hst 5 from proteolytic degradation, can entrap peptides into mucin gels, thereby reducing bioavailability. We show here that Sap6 that is secreted during hyphal growth reduces Hst 5 activity, most likely a result of proteolytic degradation of Hst 5 since this effect is abrogated with heat inactivated Sap 6. We further show that just like C. albicans shedding Msb2, mammalian mucins, fetuin and porcine gut mucin (that is related to salivary mucins), also reduce Hst 5 activity. However, we identify mucin-like protein-induced changes in C. albicans cell morphology and aggregation patterns, suggesting that the effect of such proteins on Hst 5 cannot be interpreted independently of their effect on yeast cells. MDPI 2015-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4693163/ /pubmed/26529023 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens4040752 Text en © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Puri, Sumant
Friedman, Justin
Saraswat, Darpan
Kumar, Rohitashw
Li, Rui
Ruszaj, Donna
Edgerton, Mira
Candida albicans Shed Msb2 and Host Mucins Affect the Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Hst 5
title Candida albicans Shed Msb2 and Host Mucins Affect the Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Hst 5
title_full Candida albicans Shed Msb2 and Host Mucins Affect the Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Hst 5
title_fullStr Candida albicans Shed Msb2 and Host Mucins Affect the Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Hst 5
title_full_unstemmed Candida albicans Shed Msb2 and Host Mucins Affect the Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Hst 5
title_short Candida albicans Shed Msb2 and Host Mucins Affect the Candidacidal Activity of Salivary Hst 5
title_sort candida albicans shed msb2 and host mucins affect the candidacidal activity of salivary hst 5
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4693163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26529023
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens4040752
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