Cell Reports (Aug 2021)

The macrophage-derived protein PTMA induces filamentation of the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans

  • Nicola T. Case,
  • Kwamaa Duah,
  • Brett Larsen,
  • Cassandra J. Wong,
  • Anne-Claude Gingras,
  • Teresa R. O’Meara,
  • Nicole Robbins,
  • Amanda O. Veri,
  • Luke Whitesell,
  • Leah E. Cowen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 36, no. 8
p. 109584

Abstract

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Summary: Evasion of killing by immune cells is crucial for fungal survival in the host. For the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans, internalization by macrophages induces a transition from yeast to filaments that promotes macrophage death and fungal escape. Nutrient deprivation, alkaline pH, and oxidative stress have been implicated as triggers of intraphagosomal filamentation; however, the impact of other host-derived factors remained unknown. Here, we show that lysates prepared from macrophage-like cell lines and primary macrophages robustly induce C. albicans filamentation. Enzymatic treatment of lysate implicates a phosphorylated protein, and bioactivity-guided fractionation coupled to mass spectrometry identifies the immunomodulatory phosphoprotein PTMA as a candidate trigger of C. albicans filamentation. Immunoneutralization of PTMA within lysate abolishes its activity, strongly supporting PTMA as a filament-inducing component of macrophage lysate. Adding to the known repertoire of physical factors, this work implicates a host protein in the induction of C. albicans filamentation within immune cells.

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