Emerging Microbes and Infections (Dec 2022)

Comparative miRNA transcriptomics of macaques and mice reveals MYOC is an inhibitor for Cryptococcus neoformans invasion into the brain

  • Hailong Li,
  • Xiaoxu Han,
  • Wei Du,
  • Yang Meng,
  • Yanjian Li,
  • Tianshu Sun,
  • Qiaojing Liang,
  • Chao Li,
  • Chenhao Suo,
  • Xindi Gao,
  • Yu Qiu,
  • Wen Tian,
  • Minghui An,
  • Hui Zhang,
  • Yajing Fu,
  • Xiaolin Li,
  • Tian Lan,
  • Sheng Yang,
  • Zining Zhang,
  • Wenqing Geng,
  • Chen Ding,
  • Hong Shang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2022.2081619
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1572 – 1585

Abstract

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Cryptococcal meningoencephalitis (CM) is emerging as an infection in HIV/AIDS patients shifted from primarily ART­naive to ART-experienced individuals, as well as patients with COVID-19 and immunocompetent hosts. This fungal infection is mainly caused by the opportunistic human pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans. Brain or central nervous system (CNS) dissemination is the deadliest process for this disease; however, mechanisms underlying this process have yet to be elucidated. Moreover, illustrations of clinically relevant responses in cryptococcosis are currently limited due to the low availability of clinical samples. In this study, to explore the clinically relevant responses during C. neoformans infection, macaque and mouse infection models were employed and miRNA-mRNA transcriptomes were performed and combined, which revealed cytoskeleton, a major feature of HIV/AIDS patients, was a centric pathway regulated in both infection models. Notably, assays of clinical immune cells confirmed an enhanced macrophage “Trojan Horse” in patients with HIV/AIDS, which could be shut down by cytoskeleton inhibitors. Furthermore, myocilin, encoded by MYOC, was found to be a novel enhancer for the macrophage “Trojan Horse,” and an enhanced fungal burden was achieved in the brains of MYOC-transgenic mice. Taken together, the findings from this study reveal fundamental roles of the cytoskeleton and MYOC in fungal CNS dissemination, which not only helps to understand the high prevalence of CM in HIV/AIDS but also facilitates the development of novel therapeutics for meningoencephalitis caused by C. neoformans and other pathogenic microorganisms.

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