Cargando…
The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals
The pathogenic yeast Candida albicans escapes macrophages by triggering NLRP3 inflammasome-dependent host cell death (pyroptosis). Pyroptosis is inflammatory and must be tightly regulated by host and microbe, but the mechanism is incompletely defined. We characterized the C. albicans endoplasmic ret...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
American Society for Microbiology
2016
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4888881/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27303738 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00074-16 |
_version_ | 1782434916606148608 |
---|---|
author | Tucey, Timothy M. Verma-Gaur, Jiyoti Nguyen, Julie Hewitt, Victoria L. Lo, Tricia L. Shingu-Vazquez, Miguel Robertson, Avril A. B. Hill, James R. Pettolino, Filomena A. Beddoe, Travis Cooper, Matthew A. Naderer, Thomas Traven, Ana |
author_facet | Tucey, Timothy M. Verma-Gaur, Jiyoti Nguyen, Julie Hewitt, Victoria L. Lo, Tricia L. Shingu-Vazquez, Miguel Robertson, Avril A. B. Hill, James R. Pettolino, Filomena A. Beddoe, Travis Cooper, Matthew A. Naderer, Thomas Traven, Ana |
author_sort | Tucey, Timothy M. |
collection | PubMed |
description | The pathogenic yeast Candida albicans escapes macrophages by triggering NLRP3 inflammasome-dependent host cell death (pyroptosis). Pyroptosis is inflammatory and must be tightly regulated by host and microbe, but the mechanism is incompletely defined. We characterized the C. albicans endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-mitochondrion tether ERMES and show that the ERMES mmm1 mutant is severely crippled in killing macrophages despite hyphal formation and normal phagocytosis and survival. To understand dynamic inflammasome responses to Candida with high spatiotemporal resolution, we established live-cell imaging for parallel detection of inflammasome activation and pyroptosis at the single-cell level. This showed that the inflammasome response to mmm1 mutant hyphae is delayed by 10 h, after which an exacerbated activation occurs. The NLRP3 inhibitor MCC950 inhibited inflammasome activation and pyroptosis by C. albicans, including exacerbated inflammasome activation by the mmm1 mutant. At the cell biology level, inactivation of ERMES led to a rapid collapse of mitochondrial tubular morphology, slow growth and hyphal elongation at host temperature, and reduced exposed 1,3-β-glucan in hyphal populations. Our data suggest that inflammasome activation by C. albicans requires a signal threshold dependent on hyphal elongation and cell wall remodeling, which could fine-tune the response relative to the level of danger posed by C. albicans. The phenotypes of the ERMES mutant and the lack of conservation in animals suggest that ERMES is a promising antifungal drug target. Our data further indicate that NLRP3 inhibition by MCC950 could modulate C. albicans-induced inflammation. IMPORTANCE The yeast Candida albicans causes human infections that have mortality rates approaching 50%. The key to developing improved therapeutics is to understand the host-pathogen interface. A critical interaction is that with macrophages: intracellular Candida triggers the NLRP3/caspase-1 inflammasome for escape through lytic host cell death, but this also activates antifungal responses. To better understand how the inflammasome response to Candida is fine-tuned, we established live-cell imaging of inflammasome activation at single-cell resolution, coupled with analysis of the fungal ERMES complex, a mitochondrial regulator that lacks human homologs. We show that ERMES mediates Candida escape via inflammasome-dependent processes, and our data suggest that inflammasome activation is controlled by the level of hyphal growth and exposure of cell wall components as a proxy for severity of danger. Our study provides the most detailed dynamic analysis of inflammasome responses to a fungal pathogen so far and establishes promising pathogen- and host-derived therapeutic strategies. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-4888881 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2016 |
publisher | American Society for Microbiology |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-48888812016-06-14 The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals Tucey, Timothy M. Verma-Gaur, Jiyoti Nguyen, Julie Hewitt, Victoria L. Lo, Tricia L. Shingu-Vazquez, Miguel Robertson, Avril A. B. Hill, James R. Pettolino, Filomena A. Beddoe, Travis Cooper, Matthew A. Naderer, Thomas Traven, Ana mSphere Research Article The pathogenic yeast Candida albicans escapes macrophages by triggering NLRP3 inflammasome-dependent host cell death (pyroptosis). Pyroptosis is inflammatory and must be tightly regulated by host and microbe, but the mechanism is incompletely defined. We characterized the C. albicans endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-mitochondrion tether ERMES and show that the ERMES mmm1 mutant is severely crippled in killing macrophages despite hyphal formation and normal phagocytosis and survival. To understand dynamic inflammasome responses to Candida with high spatiotemporal resolution, we established live-cell imaging for parallel detection of inflammasome activation and pyroptosis at the single-cell level. This showed that the inflammasome response to mmm1 mutant hyphae is delayed by 10 h, after which an exacerbated activation occurs. The NLRP3 inhibitor MCC950 inhibited inflammasome activation and pyroptosis by C. albicans, including exacerbated inflammasome activation by the mmm1 mutant. At the cell biology level, inactivation of ERMES led to a rapid collapse of mitochondrial tubular morphology, slow growth and hyphal elongation at host temperature, and reduced exposed 1,3-β-glucan in hyphal populations. Our data suggest that inflammasome activation by C. albicans requires a signal threshold dependent on hyphal elongation and cell wall remodeling, which could fine-tune the response relative to the level of danger posed by C. albicans. The phenotypes of the ERMES mutant and the lack of conservation in animals suggest that ERMES is a promising antifungal drug target. Our data further indicate that NLRP3 inhibition by MCC950 could modulate C. albicans-induced inflammation. IMPORTANCE The yeast Candida albicans causes human infections that have mortality rates approaching 50%. The key to developing improved therapeutics is to understand the host-pathogen interface. A critical interaction is that with macrophages: intracellular Candida triggers the NLRP3/caspase-1 inflammasome for escape through lytic host cell death, but this also activates antifungal responses. To better understand how the inflammasome response to Candida is fine-tuned, we established live-cell imaging of inflammasome activation at single-cell resolution, coupled with analysis of the fungal ERMES complex, a mitochondrial regulator that lacks human homologs. We show that ERMES mediates Candida escape via inflammasome-dependent processes, and our data suggest that inflammasome activation is controlled by the level of hyphal growth and exposure of cell wall components as a proxy for severity of danger. Our study provides the most detailed dynamic analysis of inflammasome responses to a fungal pathogen so far and establishes promising pathogen- and host-derived therapeutic strategies. American Society for Microbiology 2016-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4888881/ /pubmed/27303738 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00074-16 Text en Copyright © 2016 Tucey et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . |
spellingShingle | Research Article Tucey, Timothy M. Verma-Gaur, Jiyoti Nguyen, Julie Hewitt, Victoria L. Lo, Tricia L. Shingu-Vazquez, Miguel Robertson, Avril A. B. Hill, James R. Pettolino, Filomena A. Beddoe, Travis Cooper, Matthew A. Naderer, Thomas Traven, Ana The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals |
title | The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals |
title_full | The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals |
title_fullStr | The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals |
title_full_unstemmed | The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals |
title_short | The Endoplasmic Reticulum-Mitochondrion Tether ERMES Orchestrates Fungal Immune Evasion, Illuminating Inflammasome Responses to Hyphal Signals |
title_sort | endoplasmic reticulum-mitochondrion tether ermes orchestrates fungal immune evasion, illuminating inflammasome responses to hyphal signals |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4888881/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27303738 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00074-16 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT tuceytimothym theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT vermagaurjiyoti theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT nguyenjulie theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT hewittvictorial theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT lotricial theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT shinguvazquezmiguel theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT robertsonavrilab theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT hilljamesr theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT pettolinofilomenaa theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT beddoetravis theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT coopermatthewa theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT nadererthomas theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT travenana theendoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT tuceytimothym endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT vermagaurjiyoti endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT nguyenjulie endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT hewittvictorial endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT lotricial endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT shinguvazquezmiguel endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT robertsonavrilab endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT hilljamesr endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT pettolinofilomenaa endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT beddoetravis endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT coopermatthewa endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT nadererthomas endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals AT travenana endoplasmicreticulummitochondriontetherermesorchestratesfungalimmuneevasionilluminatinginflammasomeresponsestohyphalsignals |