| Literature DB >> 35682581 |
Paulina Czechowicz1, Joanna Nowicka1, Grażyna Gościniak1.
Abstract
Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC) is one of the most common types of vaginal infections in women around the world and is often underestimated by both patients and doctors. Research on the pathogenesis of fungal vaginal infections over the last 20 years has resulted in a closer understanding of the virulence factors involved in Candida epithelial invasion and their mechanisms of action. Recently, attention was drawn to the enormous complexity of the interaction between yeast-like fungi and host cells, as well as the level of complexity of the host's response to infection and their impact on the course and treatment of VVC. Our work provides a broad description of already known and some new reports on Candida virulence factors (such as phenotypic switching or biofilm formation capacity) and their importance for tissue invasion in VVC. At the same time, we also focus on interactions with host cells and local innate immune mechanisms involved in the response to vaginal fungal invasion that are now considered equally important in this case. The presented review describes the most important aspects of the still unknown pathogenicity of Candida associated with vaginal infections.Entities:
Keywords: Candida; VVC; biofilm; microorganism-host interaction; vaginal infections
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35682581 PMCID: PMC9179972 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23115895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
The most important virulence factors associated with Candida biofilm formation during VVC and their functions.
| Factor | Genes | Function in Biofilm Formation during VVC | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Als proteins | family of | adhesion to VECs | [ | |
| Epa protein |
|
| adhesion to VECs | [ |
| Hwp1 protein |
|
| adhesion to VECs | [ |
| Sap enzymes | family of |
| adhesion to VECs, phenotypic switching, formation of hyphae and its adhesion and penetration into VECs | [ |
| yapsins |
|
| adhesion to VECs, phenotypic switching, formation of hyphae and its adhesion and penetration into VEC | [ |
| lipases |
|
| increasing adhesion to VECs | [ |
Figure 1Recognition of Candida blastospores by VEC (vaginal epithelial cells) in women not susceptible to VVC (vulvovaginal candidiasis). PRRs (pattern recognition receptors) classify blastospores as commensals—no immunological reaction is provided.
Figure 2Recognition of Candida blastospores by VEC (vaginal epithelial cells) in women susceptible to VVC (vulvovaginal candidiasis). PRRs (pattern recognition receptors) classify blastospores as pathogens—production of proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines and alarmins is started. PMNs (polimorfonuclears) infiltrate VECs but are unable to kill Candida or directly damaging tissue. This state relates to clinical symptoms of VVC (detailed mechanism still unknown).
Figure 3Hypothetical explanation of processes underlying tissue damage and clinical symptoms during VVC (vulvovaginal candidiasis) associated with production and release of candidalysin.