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Oral epithelial cells orchestrate innate type 17 responses to Candida albicans through the virulence factor candidalysin

  • Akash H. Verma
  • , Jonathan P. Richardson
  • , Chunsheng Zhou
  • , Bianca M. Coleman
  • , David L. Moyes
  • , Jemima Ho
  • , Anna R. Huppler
  • , Kritika Ramani
  • , Mandy J. McGeachy
  • , Ilgiz A. Mufazalov
  • , Ari Waisman
  • , Lawrence P. Kane
  • , Partha S. Biswas
  • , Bernhard Hube
  • , Julian R. Naglik
  • , Sarah L. Gaffen
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • King's College London
  • Medical College of Wisconsin
  • Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
  • Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology - Hans Knöll Institute
  • Friedrich Schiller University Jena

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

179 Scopus citations

Abstract

Candida albicans is a dimorphic commensal fungus that causes severe oral infections in immunodeficient patients. Invasion of C. albicans hyphae into oral epithelium is an essential virulence trait. Interleukin-17 (IL-17) signaling is required for both innate and adaptive immunity to C. albicans. During the innate response, IL-17 is produced by T cells and a poorly understood population of innate-acting CD4+ T cell receptor (TCR)+ cells, but only the TCR+ cells expand during acute infection. Confirming the innate nature of these cells, the TCR was not detectably activated during the primary response, as evidenced by Nur77eGFP mice that report antigen-specific signaling through the TCR. Rather, the expansion of innate TCR+ cells was driven by both intrinsic and extrinsic IL-1R signaling. Unexpectedly, there was no requirement for CCR6/CCL20-dependent recruitment or prototypical fungal pattern recognition receptors. However, C. albicans mutants that cannot switch from yeast to hyphae showed impaired TCR+ cell proliferation and Il17a expression. This prompted us to assess the role of candidalysin, a hyphal-associated peptide that damages oral epithelial cells and triggers production of inflammatory cytokines including IL-1. Candidalysin-deficient strains failed to up-regulate Il17a or drive the proliferation of innate TCR+ cells. Moreover, candidalysin signaled synergistically with IL-17, which further augmented the expression of IL-1/ and other cytokines. Thus, IL-17 and C. albicans, via secreted candidalysin, amplify inflammation in a self-reinforcing feed-forward loop. These findings challenge the paradigm that hyphal formation per se is required for the oral innate response and demonstrate that establishment of IL-1– and IL-17–dependent innate immunity is induced by tissue-damaging hyphae.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereaam8834
JournalScience Immunology
Volume2
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - 2017

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