BMC Biology (Sep 2020)

Mechanical force-induced morphology changes in a human fungal pathogen

  • Charles Puerner,
  • Nino Kukhaleishvili,
  • Darren Thomson,
  • Sebastien Schaub,
  • Xavier Noblin,
  • Agnese Seminara,
  • Martine Bassilana,
  • Robert A. Arkowitz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-020-00833-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Abstract Background The initial step of a number of human or plant fungal infections requires active penetration of host tissue. For example, active penetration of intestinal epithelia by Candida albicans is critical for dissemination from the gut into the bloodstream. However, little is known about how this fungal pathogen copes with resistive forces upon host cell invasion. Results In the present study, we have used PDMS micro-fabrication to probe the ability of filamentous C. albicans cells to penetrate and grow invasively in substrates of different stiffness. We show that there is a threshold for penetration that corresponds to a stiffness of ~ 200 kPa and that invasive growth within a stiff substrate is characterized by dramatic filament buckling, along with a stiffness-dependent decrease in extension rate. We observed a striking alteration in cell morphology, i.e., reduced cell compartment length and increased diameter during invasive growth, that is not due to depolarization of active Cdc42, but rather occurs at a substantial distance from the site of growth as a result of mechanical compression. Conclusions Our data reveal that in response to this compression, active Cdc42 levels are increased at the apex, whereas active Rho1 becomes depolarized, similar to that observed in membrane protrusions. Our results show that cell growth and morphology are altered during invasive growth, suggesting stiffness dictates the host cells that C. albicans can penetrate.

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