| Literature DB >> 29403477 |
Tsokyi Choera1, Teresa Zelante2, Luigina Romani2, Nancy P Keller1,3.
Abstract
Aspergillus fumigatus is the most prevalent filamentous fungal pathogen of humans, causing either severe allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis or often fatal invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) in individuals with hyper- or hypo-immune deficiencies, respectively. Disease is primarily initiated upon the inhalation of the ubiquitous airborne conidia-the initial inoculum produced by A. fumigatus-which are complete developmental units with an ability to exploit diverse environments, ranging from agricultural composts to animal lungs. Upon infection, conidia initially rely on their own metabolic processes for survival in the host's lungs, a nutritionally limiting environment. One such nutritional limitation is the availability of aromatic amino acids (AAAs) as animals lack the enzymes to synthesize tryptophan (Trp) and phenylalanine and only produce tyrosine from dietary phenylalanine. However, A. fumigatus produces all three AAAs through the shikimate-chorismate pathway, where they play a critical role in fungal growth and development and in yielding many downstream metabolites. The downstream metabolites of Trp in A. fumigatus include the immunomodulatory kynurenine derived from indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) and toxins such as fumiquinazolines, gliotoxin, and fumitremorgins. Host IDO activity and/or host/microbe-derived kynurenines are increasingly correlated with many Aspergillus diseases including IPA and infections of chronic granulomatous disease patients. In this review, we will describe the potential metabolic cross talk between the host and the pathogen, specifically focusing on Trp metabolism, the implications for therapeutics, and the recent studies on the coevolution of host and microbe IDO activation in regulating inflammation, while controlling infection.Entities:
Keywords: Aspergillus fumigatus; IDO; Th17 cells; kynurenines; non-ribosomal peptides; peripheral tolerance; toxins; tryptophan metabolism
Year: 2018 PMID: 29403477 PMCID: PMC5786828 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01996
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Aspergillus fumigatus non-ribosomal peptides containing aromatic amino acids (AAAs) in their peptide structure.
| Toxin | AAA | Interaction with hostb-i |
|---|---|---|
| Fumigaclavine Cb | Tryptophan (Trp) | Downregulation of Th1 cytokines including TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-17A. |
| Fumiquinazoline Cc | Anthranilate | Cytotoxic |
| Fumisoquind | Tyrosine | Nothing reported |
| Fumitremorgine | Trp | Neurotoxic and produces tremors in mice |
| Gliotoxinh | Phenylalanine | Virulent in a steroid murine model of IPA |
| Hexadehydroastechromei | Trp | Overexpression resulted in a significantly higher virulence in a neutropenic murine model of IPAb |
IPA, invasive pulmonary aspergillosis; HNEC, human nasal epithelial cells.
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Figure 1Tryptophan anabolism of Aspergillus fumigatus. [Modified from that of Wang et al. (28)]. Solid arrows indicate characterized reaction as being present in A. fumigatus with product detected. Dashed arrows indicate uncharacterized reactions; however, putative orthologs are present in A. fumigatus.
Aspergillus fumigatus tryptophan (Trp) metabolism genes and putative protein function.
| Protein | Ortholog in | Gene name in | Protein function | Ortholog in mammals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AroF | Aro3 | Afu1g02110 | DAHP synthase | – |
| AroG | Aro4 | Afu7g04070 | ||
| AroM | Aro1 | Afu1g13740 | EPSP synthase | – |
| AroB | Aro2 | Afu1g06940 | Chorismate synthase | – |
| TrpE | Trp2 | Afu6g12580 | Anthranilate synthase | – |
| TrpC | Trp3 | Afu1g13090 | ||
| TrpD | Trp4 | Afu4g11980 | Anthranilate phosphoribosyltransferase | – |
| TrpC | Trp1 | Afu1g13090 | Phosphoribosylanthranilate isomerase | – |
| TrpB | Trp5 | Afu2g13250 | Trp synthase | – |
| IcsA | – | Afu6g12110 | Isochorismate synthase | – |
| AroC | Aro7 | Afu5g13130 | Chorismate mutase | – |
| PheA | Pha2 | Afu5g05690 | Prephenate dehydratase | – |
| TyrA | Tyr1 | Afu2g10450 | Prephenate dehydrogenase | – |
| AroH | Aro8 | Afu2g13630 | AAA transaminase | – |
| AroI | Aro9 | Afu5g02290 | ||
| IdoA | Bna2 | Afu3g14250 | Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenases | IDO1 |
| IdoB | Bna2 | Afu4g09830 | IDO2 | |
| IdoC | Bna2 | Afu7g02010 | TDO | |
| FmdS | Bna7 | Afu1g09960 | Kynurenine formamidase | AFMID |
| Bna4 | Bna4 | Afu6g07340 | Kynureninase | |
| Bna5 | Bna5 | Afu4g09840 | KYNU | |
| AroH | Aro8 | Afu2g13630 | AAA transaminase | LAAO |
| AroI | Aro9 | Afu5g02290 | ||
| AadA | – | Afu3g02240 | Trp carboxylase | AADC |
| MaoN | – | Afu3g00100 | Monoamine oxidase | MAOA |
| AldA | Ald4 | Afu2g00720 | Aldehyde dehydrogenase | ALDH |
| Ald5 | Afu7g01000 | |||
| Afu6g11430 | ||||
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DAHP synthase, 3-deoxy-.
Figure 2Tryptophan catabolism of Aspergillus fumigatus. Highlighted products are putatively produced in the mammalian host as the orthologous enzymes are present in the host (http://www.genome.jp/kegg). Solid arrows indicate characterized reaction as being present in A. fumigatus with product detected. Dashed arrows indicate uncharacterized reactions, however putative orthologs are present in A. fumigatus.
Summary of studies where IDO enzyme activity was found to be implicated in fungal infections.
| Fungus | Mouse model | IDO | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gastrointestinal inf. | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Gastrointestinal inf. | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Gastrointestinal inf. | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Downregulation | Not done | ( | ||
| Keratitis | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Allergy | Overexpression | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| IPA | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| IPA in chronic granulomatous disease mice | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| IPA in CF mice | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Pulmonary infection | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Pulmonary infection | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Pulmonary infection | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Pulmonary infection | Downregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( | |
| Pulmonary infection | Upregulation | Protection of the host against fungus | ( |