| Literature DB >> 19265539 |
Mauricio Alvarez1, Tamika Burn, Yong Luo, Liise-anne Pirofski, Arturo Casadevall.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cryptococcus neoformans is an encapsulated yeast that is a facultative intracellular pathogen. The interaction between macrophages and C. neoformans is critical for extrapulmonary dissemination of this pathogenic yeast. C. neoformans can either lyse macrophages or escape from within them through a process known as phagosomal extrusion. However, most studies of intracellular pathogenesis have been made with mouse cells and their relevance to human infection is uncertain. In this study we extended studies of C. neoformans-macrophage cellular interaction/s to human peripheral blood monocytes.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19265539 PMCID: PMC2670303 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-9-51
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Figure 1Intracellular replication leads to extrusion of . HPBMs were incubated with C. neoformans strain H99. Following incubation, C. neoformans budding occurred every 2–3 hours as evidenced by the small arrows. This was followed by extrusion of the C. neoformans phagosomes as evidenced by the large arrow. Images were collected at 10×.
Figure 2Intracellular polysaccharide shedding by . Polysaccharide shedding capacity of C. neoformans strain H99 was tested in HPBMs. Top panel: Intracellular shedding of cryptococcal polysaccharide from C. neoformans cells into HPBMs after 18 h incubation. Bottom panel: HPBMs lacking intracellular cryptococcal cells showed no fluorescence. Bar = 10 μM
Figure 3Cell-to-cell spread of . Following phagocytosis, human peripheral blood monocytes closely apposed to each other underwent fusion leading to cell to cell spread of C. neoformans. The small arrow points to the uninfected monocyte approaching the infected monocyte to sequester the yeast cells while the large arrow indicates the C. neoformans cells that have been fully transferred to the previously uninfected human monocyte. Bar = 10 μM
Figure 4Fc- and complement-receptor activation stimulates cell cycle progression of human peripheral blood monocytes from G1 to S. Phagocytosis of C. neoformans strain 20467 mediated by 18B7 and C. neoformans strain H99 mediated by human serum was followed by an increase in S phase cell distribution of human monocytes. Percentage of G1, S and G2 cells are indicated in the control group (C. neoformans added – and C. neoformans ingested -) and the phagocytosis assay group (C. neoformans added +) which was further separated into the non-phagocytic (C. neoformans added + and C. neoformans ingested -) and the phagocytic (C. neoformans added + and C. neoformans ingested +) groups. Comparison of G1, S and G2 percentages between non-phagocytic and phagocytic groups revealed statistically significant differences (p < 0.001).