| Literature DB >> 28248281 |
Thomas Krüger1, Ting Luo2, Hella Schmidt3, Iordana Shopova4,5, Olaf Kniemeyer6,7.
Abstract
Opportunistic human pathogenic fungi including the saprotrophic mold Aspergillus fumigatus and the human commensal Candida albicans can cause severe fungal infections in immunocompromised or critically ill patients. The first line of defense against opportunistic fungal pathogens is the innate immune system. Phagocytes such as macrophages, neutrophils and dendritic cells are an important pillar of the innate immune response and have evolved versatile defense strategies against microbial pathogens. On the other hand, human-pathogenic fungi have sophisticated virulence strategies to counteract the innate immune defense. In this context, proteomic approaches can provide deeper insights into the molecular mechanisms of the interaction of host immune cells with fungal pathogens. This is crucial for the identification of both diagnostic biomarkers for fungal infections and therapeutic targets. Studying host-fungal interactions at the protein level is a challenging endeavor, yet there are few studies that have been undertaken. This review draws attention to proteomic techniques and their application to fungal pathogens and to challenges, difficulties, and limitations that may arise in the course of simultaneous dual proteome analysis of host immune cells interacting with diverse morphotypes of fungal pathogens. On this basis, we discuss strategies to overcome these multifaceted experimental and analytical challenges including the viability of immune cells during co-cultivation, the increased and heterogeneous protein complexity of the host proteome dynamically interacting with the fungal proteome, and the demands on normalization strategies in terms of relative quantitative proteome analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Aspergillus fumigatus; Candida albicans; fungal infections; host-pathogen interaction; immunoproteomics; macrophages; mass spectrometry; neutrophils; phagolysosome
Year: 2015 PMID: 28248281 PMCID: PMC5217390 DOI: 10.3390/proteomes3040467
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomes ISSN: 2227-7382
Figure 1Overview on proteome analysis strategies to study host-pathogen interactions. The interaction of different morphotypes of fungal pathogens, including yeasts (1), hyphae (2), conidia (3), and conidiophore (4) with host immune cells, such as macrophages (5), neutrophils (6), and dendritic cells (not shown), can be studied based on different defense mechanisms, e.g., phagocytosis (7) and phagolysosome maturation (8), degranulation (9), and NET formation (10). Based on the mechanism of interest, several strategies can be applied to investigate the intracellular as well as extracellular proteome (secretome) using label-free or label-based approaches to calculate changes on the protein level in comparison to either host or pathogen control samples.
Figure 2Effects of protein normalization procedures on quantitative proteome datasets. By comparison of two proteome conditions (e.g., host-pathogen interaction versus control) based on reporter ion quantification procedures (iTRAQ, TMT) the respective ratio calculation resulted in an uneven distribution of protein fold changes if varying total protein concentrations were compared. In this example, this results in several false positive “upregulated” reporter ion ratios while the ratios of moderate down-regulated proteins (depending on the applied threshold value for differential regulation) are dropped under the threshold value as false negatives. In contrast, protein median normalization resulted in an even distribution of protein fold changes and is capable to equalize disproportionate samples and allow comparability in a relatively quantitative manner.