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Infection and Immunity, March 2005, p. 1313-1320, Vol. 73, No. 3
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.3.1313-1320.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology,1 Department of Stomatology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina,3 Department of Surgical Pathology, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin2
Received 30 September 2004/ Returned for modification 1 November 2004/ Accepted 19 November 2004
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Phagocytic cells play a key role in both innate and acquired resistance to mucosal and systemic candidiasis (4, 15, 34). Professional and nonprofessional phagocytes produce a number of metabolites and peptides that can kill or interfere with the growth of Candida species (16, 34); however, the generation of reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) and reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) by professional phagocytes is thought to play a critical role in resistance to mucosal and systemic candidiasis (34). Among the latter metabolites, superoxide, hypochlorous acid, nitric oxide, peroxynitrite, and perhaps ozone (4, 34, 38) appear to be important products that can kill invading microbes.
The importance of phagocyte oxidase in resistance to invasive candidiasis is suggested by the increased susceptibility of chronic granulomatous disease patients to systemic candidiasis (12, 18, 19). Also, mice genetically engineered to be deficient in phagocyte oxidase (Phox) activity are more susceptible to acute systemic candidiasis than their Phox-sufficient counterparts (1-3). Nitric oxide synthase 2 (NOS2) knockout mice have not yet been assessed for their susceptibility to mucosal or systemic candidiasis of endogenous origin; however, mice with chemically induced deficiencies in RNI demonstrated an increased susceptibility to invasive and mucosal candidiasis (37), and RNI has been shown to be important for the candidacidal activity of macrophages (34-36). Intriguingly, recent studies indicate Candida albicans can suppress the production of RNI metabolites produced by murine phagocytic cells in vitro (9, 30). Thus, defects in both ROI and RNI could exist in Candida-infected ROI-defective hosts; however, murine susceptibility to mucosal and systemic candidiasis in animals defective in both ROI and RNI has not been assessed. In order to learn more about the relative importance of combined defects in both ROI and RNI on resistance to mucosal and systemic candidiasis of endogenous origin, we colonized (alimentary tract) germfree Phox- and NOS2-deficient (gp91phox//NOS2/) mice (31) with C. albicans wild type and two hyphal signaling-defective mutants (efg1/efg1 and efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1) (20).
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Microorganisms. C. albicans SC5314 was maintained by monthly transfer on Sabouraud glucose agar (SGA; Difco), whereas the two mutants (efg1/efg1 and efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1) were maintained by monthly transfer on minimal synthetic dropout plates (BD Biosciences). C. albicans SC5314 was obtained from J. Dolan (Nashville State Community College, Nashville, Tenn.), and the efg1/efg1 and efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1 strains were provided by G. Fink (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston).
Oral colonization with C. albicans. Germfree adult (6 to 8 weeks of age) gp91phox//NOS2/ mice were transferred into sterile isolators, where they were colonized (alimentary tract) with a pure culture of C. albicans wild-type or mutant strains. A separate isolator was used for each wild-type and mutant strain. A viable C. albicans inoculum (106 cells/ml), harvested from a 24-h Sabouraud glucose broth culture incubated at 37°C, was swabbed into the oral cavity and onto the ano-rectal area of each mouse. After one inoculation, the germfree mice were quickly colonized with the C. albicans strains, since 24-h fecal samples contained viable C. albicans (7 to 8 log10 CFU/g). Alimentary tract colonization with the wild-type and mutant strains of C. albicans was quantified when moribund Candida-monoassociated mice were euthanized. Dilutions of intestinal contents and homogenized tissues were inoculated onto SGA. The number of viable C. albicans was determined following 24 h of incubation at 37°C. Data are presented as the log10 number of viable C. albicans CFU per gram (dry weight) of tissue.
Systemic candidiasis of endogenous origin. Internal organs from moribund mice were mixed with 10 ml of sterile distilled water and homogenized using the Stomacher II (Fisher Scientific). The homogenized tissues were serially diluted and inoculated (100 µl) onto SGA. The number of viable C. albicans organisms in tissue homogenates was determined following 24 h of incubation at 37°C.
Histopathology. Tissue samples were collected aseptically, and tongue, palate, esophagus, stomach, large and small intestines, spleen, Peyer's patches, mesenteric lymph nodes, liver, and lungs were fixed in 10% formaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The tissues were processed in graded (100, 95, 80, and 70%) alcohol and xylene solutions and embedded in paraffin. Tissue sections (4 µm) were stained with hematoxylin and eosin or Gomori stain for fungi.
RNA extraction and RT-PCR.
Tissues from germfree control and C. albicans-infected mice were homogenized in RNAwiz (Ambion) using a Tekmar tissumizer, and the RNA was extracted according to the manufacturer's instructions. The RNA preparation was treated with DNase I, and the quantity and quality of RNA was measured spectrophotometrically at absorbances of 260 and 280 nm. Equal amounts of total RNA (2 µg) from infected and germfree control tissues were reverse transcribed into cDNA using the Retroscript kit (Ambion) according to the manufacturer's instructions. PCRs were performed using the following forward and reverse primers, respectively: glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), 5'-CCAAAAGGGTCATCATCTCC and 5'-ACAGTCTTCTGGGTGGCAG; MIP-2, 5'-AAGTCATAGCCACTCTCAGG and 5'-AGCGAGGCACATCAGGTAC; KC, 5'-GCTCGCTTCTCTGTGCAG and 5'-GGAGCTTCAGGGTCAAGG; interleukin-10 (IL-10), 5'-GCTTCTATTCTAAGGCTGGC and 5'-GAGCTGCTGCAGGAATGATC; IL-15, 5'-GGGCTGTGTCAGTGTAGGT and 5'-ATTTGGACAATGCGTATAAAG. Primers for gamma interferon (IFN-
), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-
), and IL-12 (p40) were purchased from BioSource (Camarillo, Calif.). After an initial denaturation at 95°C for 2 min, the samples were subjected to 30 (GAPDH) or 35 cycles of denaturation at 95°C for 30 s, annealing at 58°C (GAPDH, TNF-
, IFN-
, MIP-2, IL-10, and IL-15), 60°C (IL-12), or 62°C (KC) for 30 s, and extension at 72°C for 30 s, with a final extension at 72°C for 10 min. The predicted sizes (in base pairs) of reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) products were as follows: GAPDH, 217; TNF-
, 298; MIP-2, 214; KC, 226; IFN-
, 937; IL-10, 172; IL-12, 331; IL-15, 362. The identities of the RT-PCR products were confirmed by DNA sequencing. Reaction mixtures lacking the addition of reverse transcriptase were also subjected to PCR amplification to check for the presence of genomic DNA. In addition, primers for KC, IFN-
, and TNF-
amplification were designed to flank an intron. Consequently, this ensured that KC, IFN-
, and TNF-
PCR products were derived from cDNA as opposed to genomic DNA. The preparation of C. albicans RNA from infected tissues and the primers and PCR conditions for EFB1, PLB1, and PLB2 have been described previously (29).
PECs: phagocytosis and killing assay. The candidacidal activity of peritoneal exudate cells (PECs) was assessed as described previously (35). Briefly, thioglycollate-elicited (3%; 24 h) PECs were cultured (RPMI medium, supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum and 0.1% minimal essential medium) with C. albicans at a PECs-to-Candida ratio of 10:1. After 2 h of incubation at 37°C with 5% CO2, the number of viable C. albicans organisms able to form a colony (CFU) was scored after overnight incubation on SGA plates at 37°C. The candidacidal activity was calculated as follows: {[CFU from control (no PECs) CFU from test (PECs + C. albicans)]/(CFU from control) } x 100. Results represent the average of three or more independent experiments with PECs collected from six to eight mice per experiment.
Flow cytometry. Cell phenotyping of the PECs was performed using the manufacturer's recommended methodology (BD Pharmingen). Briefly, thioglycollate-elicited PECs were adjusted to a concentration of 5 x 106/ml in PBS (pH 7.4) supplemented with 0.5% glucose. The PEC suspension (200 µl) was labeled with phycoerythrin- or fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate-conjugated monoclonal antibody (Mac3 for macrophages or GR-1 for granulocytes). The percentage of positive cells within the PEC population was measured using an Ortho Cytoron Absolute flow cytometer (Raritan) to record 3,000 to 5,000 events for each assay.
For the phagocytosis assays, C. albicans was harvested from Sabouraud glucose broth after overnight incubation at 37°C. After washing the cells twice with PBS, C. albicans cells were resuspended in PBS supplemented with 0.5% glucose at a concentration of 5 x 106/ml and labeled with calcein-AM (10 µM; Molecular Probes) for 1 h at 37°C. PECs and calcein-AM-labeled C. albicans (1:1 ratio) were incubated at 37°C for 2 h with 5% CO2. The mixture of PECs and calcein-AM-labeled C. albicans was then reacted with PE-conjugated monoclonal antibody to GR-1. The percentage of double-positive PECs, labeled with GR-1 (orange fluorescence) and calcein-AM (green fluorescence), was recorded as the percentage of GR-1-positive PECs phagocytizing C. albicans (26).
For the C. albicans killing assays, ethidium homodimer 1 (Molecular Probes) was used to assess the percentage of dead C. albicans cells (red fluorescence). Briefly, PECs and C. albicans cells (1:1 ratio) were incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 as described previously (26). After a 2-h incubation, 2 µM ethidium homodimer 1 (400 µl) was added to the PECs-C. albicans mixture (200 µl) and incubated at room temperature for 10 min. PBS supplemented with 0.5% glucose (700 µl) was then added, and the tubes were placed on ice and read immediately. The percentage of positive red fluorescent cells was obtained by flow cytometry (5,000 events).
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TABLE 1. Alimentary tract colonization and survival of gnotobiotic gp91phox//NOS2/ mice colonized with C. albicans wild-type (SC5314) or mutant (efg1/efg1 or efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1) strains
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FIG. 1. (A) Gross pathology of abscessed lungs and spleens harvested from gp91phox//NOS2/ mice 9 to 12 days after oral inoculation with C. albicans SC5314 or efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1, respectively. (B) Tissues harvested from germfree uninfected mice. Bar, 4 mm.
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FIG.2. Pathology of abscessed tissues from gp91phox//NOS2/ mice 9 to 12 days after oral inoculation with C. albicans SC5314, efg1/efg1, or efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1 strains. Tissues were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (A, 40x magnification) or Gomori stain for fungi (B, 100x magnification). Lu, lung; Li, liver; Sp, spleen; PP, Peyer's patch; MLN, mesenteric lymph node. Arrows depict the presence of yeast or hyphae.
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TABLE 2. Abscessed tissues in gnotobiotic gp91phox//NOS2/ mice colonized with C. albicans wild-type (SC5314) or mutant (efg1/efg1 or efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1) strains
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TABLE 3. Susceptibility of germfree gp91phox//NOS2/ mice to oroesophageal and gastric candidiasis
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FIG. 3. Relative RT-PCR analysis of phospholipase (PLB1 and -2) gene expression during gastric candidiasis in gp91phox//NOS2/ mice. Stomachs were harvested from germfree control mice or from mice 9 days after oral inoculation with C. albicans SC5314, efg1/efg1, or efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1 strains. The integrity of the cDNA and similar amounts of cDNA in each sample were judged by the detection of the EFB1 amplification product. Results shown are representative of three individual stomachs for each C. albicans strain used. Lanes: M, 100-bp DNA ladder; 1, PLB1; 2, PLB2.
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Cytokine and chemokine expression in response to colonization and infection.
ROI and RNI play important roles in mediating innate and acquired immune responses (6, 11, 17, 23). Impairment of ROI- and RNI-dependent signaling and immune responses could have contributed to the observed lethality. We investigated the capacity of these ROI- and RNI-deficient mice to express several cytokine (TNF-
, IFN-
, IL-10, IL-12, and IL-15) and chemokine (MIP-2 and KC) genes in response to C. albicans colonization and infection by using relative RT-PCR (Fig. 4). The relative expression levels of TNF-
and IFN-
were increased in gastric tissues from mice infected with either C. albicans SC5314 or efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1 strains compared to germfree controls. Similarly, expression levels of the chemoattractants MIP-2 and KC were increased in gastric tissues from the ROI- and RNI-deficient mice. In contrast, expression of IL-15, and to a lesser extent IL-10 and IL-12, were relatively similar in both infected and germfree control gastric tissues (Fig. 4). Since Toll-like receptors (TLR) play an important role in activating innate defenses and, in particular, inflammatory responses (14), we examined TLR1 to -10 mRNA expression in germfree and Candida-infected gastric tissues. Surprisingly, TLR1 to -10 were all readily detected in germfree control tissues (in the absence of a viable microbial flora), and an increase in TLR1 to -10 expression was not detected in infected tissues (data not shown).
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FIG. 4. Relative RT-PCR analysis of cytokine and chemokine expression during gastric candidiasis in gp91phox//NOS2/ mice. Stomachs were harvested from germfree control mice or from mice 9 days after oral inoculation with either C. albicans SC5314 or efg1/efg1 cph1/cph1 strains. The integrity of the cDNA and similar amounts of cDNA in each sample were judged by the detection of the GAPDH amplification product. The analysis was performed using three independent tissues for each group. A PCR was also performed in the absence of cDNA template (lane 1). M, 100-bp DNA ladder.
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TABLE 4. Killing of C. albicans SC5314 by PECs and phenotyping of PECs isolated from C57BL/6, gp91phox/NOS2/, gp91phox/, and NOS2/ micef
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It became obvious in this study that the moribund ROI- and RNI-deficient mice were not dying from an overwhelming C. albicans sepsis. We observed (grossly and histologically) exaggerated and tissue-destructive abscess formation in most internal organs of the C. albicans-colonized ROI- and RNI-deficient mice. The abscesses were most prominent in mice colonized with the C. albicans wild-type strain. Although C. albicans hyphae, and to a lesser extent yeast cells, could be seen within the abscesses that formed in the C. albicans-colonized and -infected mice, we were unable to recover viable C. albicans from homogenized abscessed organs. In contrast, viable Candida organisms were readily isolated from the alimentary tract. Apparently, host defense mechanisms (antibody, complement, antibacterial proteins, etc.) other than ROI and RNI were still functional in these immunodeficient mice. The anti-Candida factors likely came from infiltrating phagocytic cells and killed the C. albicans cells that translocated to internal organs from the alimentary tract. Histopathology indicated that the most likely route into the internal organs was via Peyer's patches and mesenteric lymph nodes, which were almost completely destroyed by infiltrating phagocytic cells. Thus, even with deficiencies in the production of reactive metabolites of both oxygen and nitrogen, the gp91phox//NOS2/ mice still possessed anti-Candida mechanisms that killed C. albicans in abscessed internal organs; however, the mice were obviously unable to regulate an exaggerated and tissue-destructive inflammatory response to the Candida that translocated from the intestinal tract. Most important, the anti-Candida factors present in the ROI- and RNI-deficient mice were not able to prevent the animals' demise.
Shiloh et al. (31) reported that gp91phox//NOS2/ mice developed abscesses that contained viable commensal, mostly enteric, bacteria. Mice with a deficiency in either ROI or RNI were reported to be resistant to the commensal infections that afflicted the mice with combined ROI and RNI deficiencies (31). The latter report and our data with C. albicans demonstrated that combined deficiencies in ROI and RNI predispose mice to systemic infections by commensal prokaryotic and eukaryotic intestinal microorganisms. The ROI- and RNI-deficient mice, which apparently lack mechanisms to kill the prokaryotic commensals, retained their candidacidal activity. The germfree mice used in our study were not fed antibiotics, and germfree controls, which were not colonized with Candida, had no abscessed tissues. Shiloh et al. (31), in an attempt to control the commensal bacterial infections, administered oral antibiotics to the ROI- and RNI-deficient mice. The addition of antibiotics to the drinking water and housing these mice in microisolator cages with sterile food, water, and bedding (specific-pathogen-free conditions) did not prevent endogenous infections by commensal bacteria (31). It is noteworthy that Shiloh et al. (31) isolated Candida guillermondii from a few abscesses in their antibiotic-treated ROI- and RNI-deficient mice. The latter data suggest that the candidacidal mechanisms that persist in mice with combined ROI and RNI deficiencies may not be able to kill all Candida species. The latter could be associated with an immunodeficient host's susceptibility to opportunistic infections by different Candida species.
We have previously reported that the lethality of C. albicans for two other strains of immunodeficient mice, Tg
26 (5, 33) and beige-nude (7) mice, was very likely due to severe, occlusive, esophageal candidiasis. We observed no overwhelming Candida sepsis or abscess formation in the Peyer's patches, lymph nodes, or internal organs of the former mice (5, 33). In contrast, occlusive oroesophageal candidiasis did not appear to be associated with lethality in the ROI- and RNI-deficient mice. In fact, mucosal tissues often had abscesses in the absence of obvious mucosal candidiasis. The mice with combined ROI and RNI defects had no problems in signaling phagocytic cells to the Candida-infected tissues, since MIP-2 and KC mRNAs were present in the infected gastric tissues. The exaggerated immune response apparently caused the destructive tissue pathology in the Peyer's patches and mesenteric lymph nodes that contributed to their rapid demise.
It is well known that ROI and RNI play important roles in signaling and regulating inflammation and immunity to infectious diseases (11, 17, 21, 23). For example, it has been reported that NO stimulates MIP-2 expression (32). In our study with mice that were deficient in NO, we detected basal levels of MIP-2 mRNA in germfree control tissues and also increased levels of MIP-2 mRNA in Candida-infected gastric tissues. The ROI- and RNI-deficient mice were also able to produce the mRNAs for the important inflammatory cytokines IFN-
and TNF-
, which may have contributed to the pathology in the ROI- and RNI-deficient mice; however, our previous studies indicated that ROI- and RNI-deficient mice were defective in their capacity to produce the antimicrobial peptide ß-defensin 4 (mBD-4) (28). ROI- and RNI-deficient mice, compared to immunocompetent controls, expressed lower levels of mBD-4 and were unable to increase mBD-4 expression in response to a Candida infection. This suggests that ROI and/or RNI may be required for maximal production of mBD-4.
In summary, the gp91phox//NOS2/ mice offer an exciting new model to study many facets of resistance and susceptibility to candidiasis.
We thank Kimberly Bauer, Andrea Boan, and April Harkins for critical reading of the paper.
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) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated murine peritoneal macrophages. Clin. Exp. Immunol. 115:491-497.[CrossRef][Medline]
B activation in response to lipopolysaccharide in NADPH oxidase-deficient mice. Infect. Immun. 69:5991-5996.
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