A Trojan horse? Immune cells ferry deadly fungus from mouse lung into the blood

How inhaled fungal spores cause fatal meningitis
Sneaky Spores: This image is of two immune cells (stained green). The smaller cell on top is empty. The larger cell on the bottom is full of the fungal pathogen Cryptococcus (stained blue). Instead of killing Cryptococcus, immune cells (i.e. alveolar macrophages) are implicated in helping Cryptococcus spores escape from the lung to cause disease in the brain. Credit: Walsh NM, et al. (2019)

A report today in PLOS Pathogens shows how inhaled fungal spores exit the lung and trigger a fatal infection in mice.

The study solves a mystery of mycology: Why are spores of a certain deadly while the yeast form of that same fungus is harmless?

Study leader Christina Hull, professor of biomolecular chemistry and medical microbiology and immunology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, focuses on Cryptococcus, the most deadly inhaled fungus. The short answer, she says, is that abandon their posts as bodyguards and begin smuggling spores into the bloodstream.

Normally, macrophages chew up pathogens and spit out their inert fragments. But in Cryptococcus infections, the immune cells serve as Trojan horses, concealing a deadly cargo.

The study revealed that macrophages in mouse lungs were packed with live Cryptococcus spores. "These immune cells are acting as a vehicle to invade the rest of the body," says first author Naomi Walsh, "with the spores hidden inside, protected from other types of immune attack."Cryptococcus mainly affects people with immune impairments due to cancer treatment, for example, or AIDS. The fungus causes severe brain infections, resulting in several hundred thousand deaths a year worldwide.

This particular fungus can take the form of spores, which are produced during sexual reproduction. Spores are durable particles that can survive for years before sprouting into yeast to complete the life cycle.

Fungal spores are also ubiquitous in the environment, so humans and other mammals commonly inhale them, highlighting the need for protection by macrophages and other immune cells in the lungs.

Fungi have great genetic diversity. In some strains, both yeast and cause disease. In others, both are harmless. But why, Hull wondered, would an inhaled yeast of a particular strain cause no disease when the same strain was deadly as an inhaled spore?

In the PLOS Pathogens report, Hull's group probed this inconsistency. The new study grows from more than a decade's worth of research by Hull's lab, searching for cracks in the armor of Cryptococcus. The launchpad was the 2009 invention by former graduate student Michael Botts of a practical method for concentrating large numbers of spores using a centrifuge. That work enabled mouse studies that needed significant quantities of pure spores.

In the mice, the spores produced by "non-virulent" yeast strains caused 100 percent mortality, with infections of the brain, kidney, , liver, and spleen, Walsh says. "Mice exposed to the same dose of yeast had fungus in the lung only ... and they looked healthy the whole time."

The Trojan horse did more than smuggle spores from the lung: the macrophages provided shelter for the spores while they germinated into yeast, showing how the spores started a .

This failure of immune defenses matters, Hull says. Fungal infections are hard to treat, because fungi are much closer to mammals on the evolutionary tree than bacteria. Therefore, compounds that harm fungi tend to harm humans.

Rule breaking is the rule in the new results, Hull says. "First, we found that spores caused fatal disease, even though they were genetically identical to yeast that could not cause disease at all. That's unusual. Then we discovered that the disease only occurred if spores were engulfed by macrophages that would normally kill them. And finally, once inside the 'protection' of the macrophages, the spores germinated, hitched a ride out of the lung, and made the mice sick. Immune cells that were supposed to protect the mouse from the fungal pathogen actually helped the fungus cause disease."

The Trojan horse strategy has previously been seen in anthrax, a bacterial disease, where move spores in a similar fashion, but this is the first time it has been identified for an inhaled fungal pathogen.

By shedding light on this conversion of a host's defense into a fungal offense, Hull's findings could lead to ways to shield people who are susceptible to the fungus due to immune deficiency. "By understanding how spores move from the lungs to other tissues," Walsh says, "we can develop new strategies for preventing spore-mediated fungal diseases and learn how to treat patients more effectively."

Another crack in the armor may be the germination process that use for conversion to , Walsh adds. "Humans do not have a process of germination, and so that process becomes an attractive target for prophylactic drugs that should not be toxic to mammals."

Already, Hull reports, automated screens for existing drugs or other compounds that can deter spore germination are producing promising results.

More information: Walsh NM, Botts MR, McDermott AJ, Ortiz SC, Wüthrich M, Klein B, et al. (2019) Infectious particle identity determines dissemination and disease outcome for the inhaled human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus. PLoS Pathog 15(6): e1007777. doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007777

Journal information: PLoS Pathogens
Citation: A Trojan horse? Immune cells ferry deadly fungus from mouse lung into the blood (2019, June 27) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2019-06-trojan-horse-immune-cells-ferry.html
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