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Infection and Immunity, August 2005, p. 4548-4559, Vol. 73, No. 8
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.8.4548-4559.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
,
Jin-Woo Bok,1,
David Andes,1
Kristian Fog Nielsen,2
Jens C. Frisvad,2 and
Nancy P. Keller1*
University of WisconsinMadison, Madison, Wisconsin,1 Center for Microbial Biotechnology, Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark2
Received 17 December 2004/ Returned for modification 7 February 2005/ Accepted 3 March 2005
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Aspergillus infections are commonly initiated by inhalation of the airborne asexual spores called conidia. In the case of A. fumigatus, the small size (3 to 5 µm) of conidia enables them to reach the pulmonary alveoli, the main site of infection. If the spores survive in the alveoli, e.g., in the absence of an adequate host immune response, they germinate and propagate in vivo, leading to disseminated invasion by the fungus of other critical organs within the host. This phase of the disease, known as invasive aspergillosis (IA), is severe and often fatal (35, 46) despite the use of antifungal drugs (21, 37). Part of the poor prognosis in IA can be attributed to the lack of understanding of the mechanisms underlying Aspergillus pathogenesis. The current view is that A. fumigatus pathogenicity is dependent on the production of ill-defined fungal proteins and toxins that promote mycelial growth in IA and on structural features of the conidia, e.g., pigmentation, that confer resistance to the host's antifungal mechanisms including phagocytosis of spores (3, 25, 37).
Recent studies have suggested a role for bioactive lipids, known as oxylipins, in impacting eukaryotic microbe-host interactions. Oxylipins encompass a large group of oxygenated C18, C20, and C22 bioactive lipids derived from
3 (n-3) and
6 (n-6) polyunsaturated fatty acids (22, 42). Eicosanoids comprise a subclass of C20 oxylipins derived from dihomo-
-linolenic acid, arachidonic acid (AA), and eicosapentaenoic acid, including the prostaglandins (PGs) and leukotrienes, which act as "local short-range hormones" in maintaining local homeostasis in a variety of tissues and cells (18). Eicosanoids are critically involved in mammalian immune responses such as regulation of inflammation, pain, fever, and allergic responses, as well as regulation of the cardiovascular system, reproduction, and renal function, and might play a role in carcinogenesis (18, 54, 67). Mammalian prostaglandin synthases, and subsequent PG production, are activated by mechanical trauma or by specific growth factors, cytokines, and other abiotic or biotic stimuli, including pathogen invasion (18). A single eicosanoid can have pleiotropic effects due to the existence of multiple receptors for each lipid species. In turn, these receptors have different effects on different cell types (18, 20). Host production of PGs upon infection is well documented (18); however, recent studies suggest that PG production by eukaryotic microbes could be contributing to the infection process (23, 42, 44). The potential link between pathogen eicosanoids and modulation of host immunity is intriguing and potentially a target for future pharmaceuticals (42).
Initial efforts to elucidate an oxylipin biosynthetic pathway in fungi stemmed from interest in deciphering potential oxylipin-driven cross-communication between plants and mycotoxigenic aspergilli (8, 64). Studies of the genetic model A. nidulans resulted in the characterization of three dioxygenase-encoding genes, ppoA, ppoB, and ppoC, required for biosynthesis of oleic and linoleic acid-derived oxylipins similar in structure to plant defense molecules and important in integrating asexual and sexual spore balance in A. nidulans (58-61). Because studies have established that oxylipin-generating enzymes exhibit activity toward more than one substrate, and all three of these putative dioxygenases showed high homology to mammalian cyclooxygenases (COX) (prostaglandin H synthases), we have here investigated the possibility that fungal Ppo proteins could be involved in PG biosynthesis. We show that both A. nidulans and A. fumigatus ppo genes contribute to PG production in these species. The A. fumigatus PG mutant showed increased virulence in a murine model of pulmonary aspergillosis and enhanced resistance to environmental stress. We suggest the possibility of oxylipins as cross talk bioactive lipids that induce host defense mechanisms important in retarding the development of pulmonary and invasive aspergillosis.
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ppoA
ppoB) is a recombinant strain resulting from a cross between RDIT12.6 and TTMK2.60 (58), and RDIT74.8 (
ppoB
ppoC) is a recombinant strain resulting from a cross between RDIT58.3 and TTMK2.60. The A. nidulans
ppoA
ppoB
ppoC triple mutant was created by a sexual cross between RDIT54.13 and TTMK2.60 (58). All strains were maintained on Aspergillus glucose minimal medium (GMM) {6.0 g NaNO3, 0.52 g KCl, 0.52 g MgSO4 · 7H2O, 1.52 g KH2PO4, 1 ml trace elements [2.2 g ZnSO4 · 7H2O, 1.1 g H3BO3, 0.5 g MnCl2 · 4H2O, 0.5 g FeSO4 · 7H2O, 0.16 g CoCl2 · 5H2O, 0.16 g CuSO4 · 5H2O, 0.11 g (NH4)6Mo7O24 · 4H2O, 5.0 g Na4 EDTA in 100 ml distilled H2O], 10 g glucose, 15.0 g agar, pH 6.5, in 1 liter distilled H2O} with appropriate supplements (27). Agar was not added for liquid medium. |
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TABLE 1. Aspergillus strains used in this study
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Plasmid and strain construction.
Aspergillus nidulans ppo genes were previously cloned, sequenced, and disrupted by replacement with marker genes: ppoA was replaced with metG, ppoB with pyroA, and ppoC with trpC (58, 59, 61). Briefly, disruption vectors were constructed by flanking the A. nidulans marker genes (metG, pyroA, and trpC) with
1-kb DNA fragments from upstream of the corresponding ppo gene start codon and downstream of the corresponding ppo stop codon. Double and triple ppo mutants were created by sexual crosses.
Aspergillus fumigatus AfppoA, AfppoB, and AfppoC genes were obtained from the TIGR database (http://www.tigr.org/tdb/e2k1/afu1/) based on a homologous search using A. nidulans ppoA, ppoB, and ppoC sequences. The polymerase Thermal ACE (Invitrogen Co.) was used for PCR amplifications. RNA interference (RNAi) technology was used to create an A. fumigatus vector that would silence expression of all three ppo genes (AfppoA, AfppoB, and AfppoC) simultaneously by sequentially arranging segments of each gene in both a forward and a reverse fashion in one plasmid to create an inverted-repeat transgene (IRT). Fragments (500 bp each) of AfppoA (AscI, BamHI-NdeI), AfppoB (NdeI-SphI), and AfppoC (SphI, NotI-NcoI) were amplified using primer combinations with the indicated restriction enzyme sites introduced. The primers used were PpoAf (5'-CTTCGGCGCGCCATGGATCCCGATAGAGGGCCTTGCCCATC-3'), PpoAr (5'-CCCTCATATGATTGTGGAAGACGCGAAAGAGT-3'), PpoBf (5'-GGCTCATATGCGCGAAATATCCACCTGGTTT-3'), PpoBr (5'-TCAAGCATGCAAACCTGACGAACTGGGG-3'), PpoCf (5'-CCCAGCATGCACAAGACCTCTGGTTACTTGGA-3'), and PpoCr (5'-TAATCCATGGCGGCCGCAGGGTATCCAGCTGCGT-3') (f, forward; r, reverse). The ppoA PCR product was digested by NdeI, the ppoB PCR product by NdeI-SphI, and the ppoC PCR product by SphI. The three ppo fragments were ligated together, and the ligation mixture was used as a template to obtain a 1.5-kb PCR product (AfppoA-ppoB-ppoC) using the primer pair PpoAf-PpoCr. This 1.5-kb PCR product was initially digested with AscI and NcoI and ligated into the corresponding sites of pTMH44.2 (19) to generate plasmid pCEJ1. Digestion of pCEJ1 with BamHI and NotI yielded once more the 1.5-kb triple-ppo PCR product, which was further ligated into the corresponding sites of pTMH44.2 (19) in a forward orientation to yield the pCEJ2.7 vector. Next, the 1.5-kb AscI-NcoI fragment was released from pCEJ1, allowing it to be placed in the AscI-NcoI site of pCEJ2.7 in a reverse orientation, to create the pCEJ2.7.4 vector. An internal
280-bp spacer green fluorescent protein fragment separated the inverted repeats, and the A. nidulans gpdA promoter, which has been successfully used in different fungal systems for high levels of transcription (48), drove the transgene. The Aspergillus parasiticus pyrG gene (pBZ5) (53) was inserted into an EcoRI site of pCEJ2.7.4 to give pJW66.3 (Fig. 1). This final plasmid was used for transformation of AF293.1 to silence expression of AfppoA, AfppoB, and AfppoC in A. fumigatus.
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FIG. 1. Plasmid construction to silence the three ppo genes simultaneously in A. fumigatus. Segments ( 500 bp) of each gene were aligned in both a forward and a reverse orientation in one plasmid to create the inverted-repeat transgene.
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, PGF2
(100% specificity), PGF3
, PGD2, PGE3 (<50% specificity), and thromboxane B2 (TXB2; 5% specificity). It does not detect PGA, PGB1, 15-keto-PGE2, 13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGF2, or misopristol. The cultures without AA measure the endogenous production of PGs in the absence of exogenous fatty acid substrates. Student's t test and analysis of variance were used to analyze the significance of differences between the experimental groups using the Statistical Analysis System (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Physiological studies. Conidium production studies for wild-type A. fumigatus and Afppo IRT mutant strains were performed on plates containing 30 ml of solid 1.5% GMM. Five milliliters of a top layer consisting of cool melted 0.7% agar-GMM containing 106 conidia of the appropriate strain was added to each plate. Cultures were incubated in continuous dark at 37°C. A core with a diameter of 12.5 mm was removed from each plate after 2, 4, and 6 days and was homogenized for 1 min in 3 ml of sterile water supplemented with 0.01% Tween 80 to release the spores. Spores were counted using a hemacytometer. The experiments were performed with four replicates. Radial growth tests were performed in triplicate with approximately 104 conidia centered on 30-ml GMM plates, and growth rates were recorded as colony diameter over time at five temperature regimes: 24°C, 28°C, 32°C, 37°C, and 42°C. For germination tests, strains were inoculated in minimal medium at 106 spores/ml and shaken for 24 h at 300 rpm and 37°C. Samples were examined at 2-h intervals, and the germination rate was determined by counting 100 conidia. The mycelial weight of lyophilized tissue was assessed after 4 days of culture in liquid GMM. Physiological data were statistically compared by analysis of variance and Fisher's least significant difference using the Statistical Analysis System (SAS Institute, Cary, NC).
Bioassay of arachidonic acid and PGE2. The fatty acids used in this study included arachidonic acid (20:4) and PGE2 obtained from Cayman Chemicals Co. Amounts of 0.1 mg and 1 mg were dissolved in 50 µl of methanol and dried on 12.5-mm-diameter paper filter disks. A paper filter disk treated with methanol was used as the solvent control. After drying, the fatty acid-containing disks and the methanol-containing disks were laid on the agar surfaces of plates containing 30 ml of solid 1.5% YGT medium (9) with a 5-ml top layer consisting of cool melted 0.7% agar-YGT containing 105 conidia of the wild-type A. nidulans (RDIT9.32) or A. fumigatus (AF293) strain. The cultures were incubated under light and dark conditions for 8 days.
Stress tolerance assays.
Determination of tolerance levels against heat and oxidative stress was performed as previously described (10, 31). For the thermal tolerance assay, wild-type or Afppo IRT strain conidia were inoculated on solid GMM in triplicate (100 to 150 colonies per plate) and incubated at 37°C for 8 h. Cultures were transferred to 50°C for 3 or 4 h, and the plates were incubated for an additional 36 h at 37°C. Surviving colonies were counted. For the hydrogen peroxide conidial sensitivity assay, 1-ml conidial suspensions containing 105 spores were incubated with different hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) concentrations (0, 20, 40, 80, 150, and 250 mM) for 30 min at room temperature. Each spore suspension was then diluted with sterile distilled water, and conidia were inoculated on solid GMM. After incubation at 37°C for 36 h, colony numbers were counted and calculated as a percentage of the control (10). For the assay of hyphal sensitivity to H2O2, plates containing
50 30-h-grown colonies were overlaid with 10 ml of 0, 50, 100, and 200 mM H2O2 solutions. After a 10-min incubation at room temperature, the H2O2 solution was removed, and the plates were washed twice with sterile distilled water and incubated further for 24 h at 37°C. The number of colonies that survived was calculated as a percentage of the control. All the experiments were performed in triplicate.
Animal model of Aspergillus infection. The virulence of isogenic wild-type and Afppo IRT strains was studied in a lung infection model, with the approval of the University of Wisconsin animal care committee. Conidia were harvested by flooding of fungal colonies with 0.85% NaCl with Tween 80, enumerated with a hemacytometer, and adjusted to a final concentration of 6.5 log10 CFU/ml. Counts and the viability of the inocula were verified by duplicate serial plating on GMM plates. Six-week-old outbred Swiss ICR mice (Harlan Sprague-Dawley) weighing 24 to 27 g were immunosuppressed by intraperitoneal injection of cyclophosphamide (100 mg/kg of body weight) on days 4, 1, and 3 and with a single dose of cortisone acetate (200 mg/kg). Mice were anesthetized via halothane inhalation in a bell jar at day 0. Sedated mice (10 mice/fungal strain) were infected by nasal instillation of 50 µl of the inoculum (day 1) and monitored three times daily for 7 days postinfection. All surviving mice were sacrificed at day 7. The tissue fungal burden of a whole-lung homogenate was quantified by serial dilution and enumeration of CFU (CFU/2 lungs). The duration of survival (in days after inoculation) was recorded for each animal. Moribund animals were sacrificed and cumulative survival recorded. Survival and clearance of residual fungal burden in tissue (CFU/2 lungs) were used as the outcome variables to assess the relative virulence of isogenic strains.
Mouse lung metabolite analysis. Chloroform extracts from mouse lungs were redissolved in 400 µl methanol (high-performance liquid chromatography grade) and loaded onto a Strata X (Phenomenex, Torrance, Ca) 60-mg SPE column already containing 3 ml water (Milli-Q). The SPE column had previously been sequentially activated with 2 ml methanol and 2 ml water. After the sample was loaded, the column was washed with 1 ml water, and the sample was eluted with 4 ml methanol-water (9:1) containing 0.5% formic acid (analytically pure). The samples were then evaporated in vacuo on a SpeedVac, redissolved twice in 50 µl methanol, and filtered through a 4-mm-diameter 0.45-µm-pore-size polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon) syringe filter. Samples (3 µl) were then analyzed by liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HR-MS) on an Agilent 1100 LC system equipped with a UV photo diode array detector and coupled to an LCT orthogonal time-of-flight mass spectrometer (Waters-Micromass, Manchester,United Kingdom) (40). Separation was performed on a Phenomenex (Torrance, CA) Luna II C18 (II) column (50 by 2 mm; inner diameter, 3 µm) using a water-acetonitrile system at a flow rate of 0.3 ml/min, starting at 15% acetonitrile, increasing the concentration linearly to 100% in 20 min, and holding at 100% for 5 min. The water was buffered with 10 mM ammonium formate and 20 mM formic acid (both analytical grade) and the acetonitrile with 20 mM formic acid. Gliotoxin and other metabolites were identified by comparison to reference standards (40) of known A. fumigatus metabolites (11, 12) and extracts from agar cultures, based on their retention time, UV spectra, and positive electrospray spectra (ESI+). For secondary metabolites reported from A. fumigatus (11, 12) but not available to us as standards, we used their known [M+H]+ ions as a basis for detecting them by selected ion chromatograms. The secondary metabolites not available as standards included gliotoxins E and G; gliotoxin acetate; dehydrogliotoxin; 5a,6-dehydrobisdethio-3,10a-bis(methylthio)gliotoxin; pseurotins B, C, D, F2, and F1; TR-2; fumitremorgin C; fumiquinazolines A to E; and tryptoquivalines A to H.
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FIG. 2. Phylogenetic analysis (A) and percentages of amino acid identity (B) of the A. nidulans and A. fumigatus Ppo proteins. Amino acid sequences of the predicted Ppo proteins were aligned with the ClustalW software program, and the tree diagram was created by the TreeView software program. Bar, 0.1 amino acid substitution per site.
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A more detailed sequence alignment of the Aspergillus Ppo sequences with horse COX-2 and human COX-1 was performed with the ClustalW program to identify conserved functional motifs. The sequence similarity appeared to be restricted to the catalytic domain of COX and was most striking along the
-helices (predicted to be present in Ppo proteins by using the PredictProtein program, available at http://cubic.bioc.columbia.edu/predictprotein/) as shown in Fig. 3A. Structural homology shows that both the distal and proximal His heme ligands and the important Tyr residue, which are required for enzyme activity and are completely conserved within the COX family, aligned in context with identical amino acids of A. nidulans PpoC, A. nidulans PpoA, and A. fumigatus AfPpoA but not with the other Aspergillus proteins. The core helix H2 harbors the distal His heme ligand (consensus THXXFXT), and the core helix H8 contains the proximal heme ligand and the important Tyr residue (consensus EFNXXYXWH) of PGH synthases (54). In contrast to the structural conservation found within the catalytic domain, the regions of COX falling outside of this domain, that is, the epidermal growth factor-like domain and the membrane-binding domain, do not seem to have equivalent residues in the Ppo proteins. G. graminis Lds also has similar conserved regions in its sequence, as was previously reported (24); however, the biochemical involvement of Lds in PG biosynthesis has not been demonstrated.
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FIG. 3. Aspergillus Ppo proteins share similarity with mammalian COX. (A) Partial alignment of PpoC with human COX1 and horse COX2 over the catalytic domain. The distal histidine (H) heme ligand (helix 2), the proximal H heme ligand (helix 8), and the important Tyr (Y) residue (helix 8) of COX enzymes are boxed. The alignment displays the degree of conservation among the polypeptides as observed in each column: asterisks, identical amino acids across the three proteins in the alignment; colons, conserved substitutions; periods, semiconserved substitutions. The multiple alignment analysis was carried out using ClustalW, and the prediction of helix domains was carried out using the PredictProtein program. (B) Partial ClustalW alignment of the A. nidulans and A. fumigatus Ppo predicted catalytic domain (boxes indicate the presence of distal and proximal H heme ligands and the Y residue in PpoA, PpoC, and AfPpoA polypeptides). Boldfaced letters indicate amino acids that are conserved among the sequences.
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The triple Afppo mutant (Afppo IRT) was created by transformation of strain 293.1 with pJW66. PCR and Southern blot analysis of 85 transformants revealed the introduction of the IRT Afppo construct in five transformants. Macroscopically, all five transformants were identical to each other and to the wild type. Transformants TJW62.2, TJW62.5, and TJW62.10 and the wild-type AF293 were selected for mouse virulence studies (see below); TJW62.2, TJW62.10, and AF293 were used for ELISA analysis (see below); and TJW62.2 was used for further physiological and molecular analyses. As predicted, the A. fumigatus transformants, which incorporated the Afppo IRT plasmid into their genome, displayed an Afppo silencing phenotype, as monitored by expression studies of the three ppo genes. Figure 4 shows that in contrast to the wild type, all three genes showed decreased expression in the Afppo IRT strain. Similar results were obtained for the other Afppo IRT strains (data not shown).
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FIG. 4. RNAi technology successfully silenced the three ppo genes in A. fumigatus. Wild-type A. fumigatus and the Afppo IRT (TJW62.2) mutant were grown in stationary liquid GMM for 24 h, 48 h, and 72 h at 37°C. Ethidium bromide-stained rRNA is shown as a loading control. The silenced Afppo IRT mutant showed decreased expression of all three ppo genes at all time points.
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ppoA
ppoB
ppoC mutant of A. nidulans, the Afppo IRT mutant had no alterations in vegetative development or spore germination relative to the wild type in liquid GMM. However, in contrast to the A. nidulans
ppoA
ppoB
ppoC strain, which demonstrated a significant reduction in asexual spore production and a significant increase in sexual spore production (58), spore counts of the A. fumigatus triple ppo mutant did not show any alterations in asexual spore production at 28°C and 37°C in GMM, the only conditions tested (data not shown). This might be due to the inability of A. fumigatus to form the sexual stage. Interestingly, radial growth experiments on solid GMM with glucose as the sole carbon source indicated that the Afppo IRT mutant grows 5 to 10% faster than the wild type at 24°C, 28°C, and 42°C but that there is no difference at 37°C.
Ppo mediation of prostaglandin production in A. nidulans and A. fumigatus.
One primary goal of this study was to determine if any of the ppo genes could be involved in PG production. Recent reports indicate that several fungi can utilize exogenous sources of arachidonic acid to produce a number of different eicosanoids (44, 45); however, no candidate enzyme has been uncovered. By following procedures used by other labs in establishing that 90% of fungal PGs are secreted (36, 45), supernatants from Aspergillus strains grown in RPMI medium were examined for PG production. Dry weights of recovered mycelium were identical, but there was a decrease in production of PGs in A. nidulans strains carrying a
ppoA allele (14%) and in all strains carrying the
ppoC allele (36% to 37%) (Fig. 5A) (P < 0.01). These data suggest that PpoC and PpoA are involved in PG production by A. nidulans. Examination of two IRT Afppo mutants (TJW62.2 and TJW62.10) showed that both mutants had a 12% to 15% reduction in PG biosynthesis (Fig. 5B) (P < 0.01). The amount of PGs that was detected in non-AA-fed cultures of both aspergilli was below the assay's threshold of detection (40 pg/ml).
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FIG. 5. A. nidulans and A. fumigatus ppo mutants demonstrated decreased levels of PG production. Shown are PG levels in culture supernatants (pg/ml) of 7-day cultures of wild-type A. nidulans (WT) and ppo mutants as described in Table 1 (A) and wild-type A. fumigatus and two Afppo IRT transformants (TJW62.2 and TJW62.10) (B). Values are means of three replicates. Letters (a, b, c, and d) indicate statistical differences (P < 0.05).
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FIG. 6. Silencing of the three Afppo genes in A. fumigatus led to hypervirulent strains. Virulence was studied in a murine lung infection model. Immunosuppressed Swiss ICR mice (Harlan Sprague-Dawley) were infected with wild-type AF293 or one of the Afppo IRT (TJW62.2, TJW62.5, TJW62.10) strains. Duration of survival (in days after inoculation) was recorded for each animal. The log rank test was used to perform pairwise comparison of survival among the strain groups; P values for comparison of the survival of wild-type- and Afppo IRT-infected mice are 0.02 to >0.001.
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FIG. 7. Chromatograms of chloroform extracts from murine lung extracts after infection with wild-type A. fumigatus or the triple ppo mutant TJW62.2. (A) Base peak (BPI) chromatograms showing no major differences from the control mouse. (B) Reconstructed ion chromatograms (m/z 263.100 to 263.109) showing the major fragment ion of gliotoxin. By showing only this fragment, almost all noise from the many compounds originating from the mouse lungs is filtered away and the gliotoxin peaks can clearly be detected at the same retention time as the reference standard in the triple ppo mutant and the wild type, whereas only noise can be seen in the noninfected mouse lung (control). To the left, the ESI+ MS spectra for the triple ppo mutant (top), the wild type (middle), and a reference standard of gliotoxin (bottom) are shown.
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FIG. 8. Silencing of the three Afppo genes caused elevated oxidative resistance of A. fumigatus conidia. Bars show the relative percentages of germination of A. fumigatus conidia with different concentrations of H2O2 compared to 0 mM. Conidia of the A. fumigatus wild-type strain AF293 (WT) and the triple-ppo-silenced Afppo IRT strain (TJW62.2) were incubated with varying concentrations (0 to 150 mM) of H2O2 as indicated. Values are means of three replicates. Error bars, standard errors.
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Effects of arachidonic acid and PGE2 on Aspergillus physiology. Earlier studies in our lab showed that C18 unsaturated fatty acids and their derived oxylipins induced developmental changes in A. nidulans including changes in sexual-to-asexual spore ratios and secondary metabolite production (8, 9). Similar studies have shown that PGs can induce developmental changes in Candida albicans (28, 43). We therefore thought it possible that PGs and their progenitor, arachidonic acid, might affect Aspergillus physiological processes.
Wild-type A. fumigatus and A. nidulans cultures were examined for reactions to PGE2 and arachidonic acid. The addition of PGE2 to A. nidulans cultures inhibited the formation of conidia, in sharp contrast to arachidonic acid, which significantly induced conidiation (visualized as a green halo of conidia around the disk) (Fig. 9). These results were reminiscent of the differential reaction of A. nidulans to the plant oxylipin 13S-hydroperoxy-9Z,11E-octadecadienoic acid (13S-HPODE) and its precursor, linoleic acid, where the former induced conidial formation at 0.1 mg and the latter inhibited conidiation at the same concentration (9). Neither PGE2 nor arachidonic acid affected sporulation in A. fumigatus; however, they both inhibited the production of hyphal pigments (Fig. 9).
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FIG. 9. Prostaglandin PGE2 and AA affect A. nidulans and A. fumigatus development. Wild-type RDIT9.32 and AF293 cultures were treated with filter paper disks containing the solvent control (methanol), 0.1 mg of AA or PGE2, and 1.0 mg of AA or PGE2. PGE2 at 1.0 mg inhibited asexual sporulation in A. nidulans RDIT9.32 (40-h culture in the light); in contrast, 1.0 mg AA induced asexual sporulation in A. nidulans RDIT9.32 (24-h culture in the light). All the concentrations tested for either PGE2 or AA inhibit pigment biosynthesis in A. fumigatus (40-h culture in the dark).
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The types of oxylipins produced by fungi are numerous, and likely many remain to be characterized. Although many studies have focused on C18 oxylipins, several experiments have revealed that both pathogenic and nonpathogenic fungal species produce detectable amounts of both C20 cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase products (36, 44, 45). The arachidonic acid metabolites PGF2 and PGF2-lactone have been detected in a number of environmental yeasts of the family Lipomycetaceae (Dipodascopsis, Lipomyces, Myxozyma, and Zygozyma) (22, 33, 34, 55) as well as in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (33). The pathogenic yeasts Cryptococcus neoformans and Candida albicans and the filamentous fungus A. fumigatus produce both PGs and leukotrienes, and their amounts are significantly increased after exogenous application of arachidonic acid (44, 45). Furthermore, COX inhibitors, including aspirin and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, inhibited hydroxyeicosa-tertraenoic acid, PGE2, and PGD2 production in several members of the family Lipomycetaceae, supporting the view that a COX-like enzyme is active in these fungi (5, 32, 36). However, no candidate protein has been identified in fungi prior to this report.
The structural similarity between Ppo proteins and COX led us to investigate the possibility that these enzymes could be involved in PG production. COX possesses two enzymatic activities, a cyclooxygenase that catalyzes the oxygenation of polyunsaturated substrates, such as arachidonic acid, to form prostaglandin G2 (PGG2) and a peroxidase that can use a variety of electron donors to reduce PGG2 to form prostaglandin H2 (PGH2) (54). The amino acid sequences of Ppo proteins are predicted to contain both an oxygenase and a peroxidase domain (58, 59, 61). Further detailed comparison of the amino acid sequences of all six Ppo proteins with human and horse COX revealed that three of the proteins, A. nidulans PpoC and PpoA and A. fumigatus PpoA, contained the conserved catalytic residues found in COX
-helices, which included the proximal and distal heme ligands and the critical tyrosine residue of PGH synthases (24, 54). Considering the correlation of loss of PG activity in the respective A. nidulans ppoC and ppoA mutants (Fig. 5) and presence of catalytic residues, it is tempting to speculate that these amino acids are indicators of possible PG activity in fungi. Investigation of single A. fumigatus Ppo mutants may shed further light on the viability of this observation.
Through sexual genetics, we were able to analyze every possible combination of ppo mutant background in A. nidulans. The consistent decrease in PG production in all combinations of the
ppoC allele suggests a major role for this enzyme in PG biosynthesis (Fig. 5A). The slight increase in production of PGs in
ppoB and
ppoA
ppoB strains correlated with an upregulation in the expression level of ppoC (58, 59), further implicating PpoC in the synthesis of PGs. Previous biochemical data has shown that PpoC is also likely involved in the production of oleic acid-derived oxylipins (59). The ability of a fatty acid oxygenase to utilize different fatty acids as substrates is not uncommon. For instance, the G. graminis Lds can oxygenate oleic,
-linolenic, and ricinoleic acids (56).
In contrast to the ease of combining alleles in A. nidulans, disrupting three genes in the asexual fungus A. fumigatus involves considerable effort and has not been reported to date. To address this issue, we attempted to silence all three Afppo genes by using one vector. As demonstrated by Northern blot (Fig. 4) and PG (Fig. 5B) analyses, this approach was successful. RNAi has emerged as an effective method for silencing gene expression in many eukaryotes and has recently been used successfully in genome-wide functional tests (2, 29); we believe this method will greatly help in further genomic studies of A. fumigatus. Caveats with this method are (i) the potential of off-target effects by the siRNAs that could jeopardize correct interpretation of gene function and (ii) the fact that some transcripts are still produced and not completely eliminated, unlike the situation in traditional gene replacement, as illustrated in Fig. 4. The fact that PG reduction in the Afppo IRT strain is not as pronounced as in the A. nidulans triple mutant could well be a reflection of this incomplete transcript suppression. Additionally, the presence of alternative enzymes or pathways for PG biosynthesis is expected, since both the A. nidulans triple mutant and the Afppo IRT strain still produced substantial amounts of PGs. It is also possible that levels of other eicosanoids are decreased in the ppo mutants, since our detection method was limited to specific PGs and did not cover the full array of known eicosanoids.
Despite a decrease of only 12% in PG production as measured by ELISA (Fig. 5B), the Afppo IRT strains displayed a significant increase in virulence in the murine pulmonary model (Fig. 6). To our knowledge this is the first report of a hypervirulent A. fumigatus mutant. Since a unique characteristic of mammalian PGs is their potency at very low (nanomolar) concentrations and their very short half-livesthey are produced de novo and act near the site of their synthesiswe speculate that the small decrease in the endogenous fungal PG levels can lead to a significant increase in the virulence of A. fumigatus (18). Two determinants implicated as virulence factors in A. fumigatus include spore pigmentation (6, 57) and gliotoxin production (41). Loss of pigmentation results in increased phagocytosis, whereas gliotoxin, a secondary metabolite produced in tissues of mice following development of invasive aspergillosis (15), is a potent immunomodulating agent and an inducer of apoptotic cell death in a number of cell types (62). Microscopic examination of Afppo IRT spores did not reveal any differences in pigmentation compared to the wild type. Chemical analysis indicated that gliotoxin production in mouse lungs by Afppo IRT strains was not altered from that by the wild type (Fig. 7). These factors, therefore, do not seem to play a role in the increased virulence of the Afppo IRT strains.
Physiological examination of one of the Afppo IRT strains did, however, indicate increased resistance to environmental stress as observed by H2O2 treatment (Fig. 8). H2O2 treatment of fungal propagules is an indirect method of measuring the putative resistance of the pathogen to host ROS, a major host antimicrobial effector system also active against Aspergillus conidia (63). ROS production in mammals occurs during the course of neutrophil and macrophage activation and is implicated in the defense against fungal pathogens (1, 49, 50). Increased resistance to a ROS-mounted defense could protect a pathogen and render it more virulent.
Although the hypothesis is not examined in this study, we also propose that part of the increased virulence of the Afppo IRT strains is due to changes in host physiology. A plausible explanation is that the Ppo-generated PGs enhance host defense mechanisms, perhaps through initiation of inflammation responses involved in recruiting phagocytic cells (16, 66). PGs and eicosanoids in general regulate both proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory responses of the immune system. A single PG molecule can have pleiotropic effects due to the existence of numerous receptors for each lipid species, and in turn, these receptors can elicit different responses on different cell types (18, 20). A decrease in PG signaling might lead to a decrease or slower response time in these host-mounted defenses. Finally, considering the detectable macroscopic reaction of Aspergillus spp. to exogenously applied arachidonic acid and PGE2, we propose that Aspergillus (and other eukaryotic pathogens) may share similar oxylipin signaling pathways with host cells. PGs are transported out of cells and interact with cell surface receptors linked to G proteins to initiate appropriate signaling pathways in mammalian cells (26). Our central hypothesis is that fungal oxylipins, similarly to the endogenous mammalian PGs, have the potential to mediate interkingdom signaling via a cross talk communication in which the pathogen triggers the host defense immune responses at the site of infection by binding to mammalian G protein receptors; this process may result in the retardation of pathogenesis (Fig. 10).
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FIG. 10. Hypothetical model depicting Aspergillus-host oxylipin signaling. Ppo enzymes are putative cyclooxygenase-like enzymes generating different oxylipin species, including prostaglandins. We propose that oxylipins either directly regulate developmental and virulence pathways in the fungal cell or exit the cell through the mediation of specific transporters. The oxylipins outside the cell act as autocrine or paracrine ligands that bind and sensitize G protein-coupled receptors, activating downstream signaling cascades. This signaling activation triggers the upregulation of the mammalian immune system to retard the fungal pathogenenesis. Ppo, psi-producing oxygenases; LTs, leukotrienes; LOX, lipoxygenase.
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We thank Courtney Jahn for experimental help and Thomas Hammond for providing the plasmid vector pTMH44.2. Genomic data for A. fumigatus were provided by The Institute for Genomic Research (www.tigr.org/tdb/e2k1/afu1) and The Wellcome Trust, Sanger Institute (www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/A_fumigatus); genomic data for A. nidulans were provided by The Broad Institute (www.broad.mit.edu/annotation/fungi/aspergillus/). Coordination of analyses of these data was enabled by an international collaboration involving more than 50 institutions from 10 countries and coordinated from Manchester, United Kingdom (www.cadre.man.ac.uk and www.aspergillus.man.ac.uk).
D.I.T. and J.-W.B. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
Present address: The Sainsbury Laboratory, John Innes Centre, Norwich Research Park, Colney Lane, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom. ![]()
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