Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology and Medical Mycology, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Yeast (Y) to germ-tube (GT) transition of
Candida albicans
is considered a putative virulence trait. On the other hand, interleukin-12 (IL-12) is a key promoter of T-helper type 1 protective immunity against this human opportunistic pathogen. We studied IL-12 production by human monocytes cocultured in vitro with Y or GT forms of
C. albicans
. Following stimulation by Y cells, monocytes produced appreciable levels of IL-12, which, upon addition of gamma interferon (IFN-γ), compared to those achievable by lipopolysaccharide (100 ng/ml) stimulation (140 ± 65 and 185 ± 80 pg/ml, respectively [mean ± standard deviation in four independent experiments]). In contrast, IL-12 production by GT cell-stimulated monocytes was much lower or absent (<5 pg/ml) and could not be brought to the level induced by Y cells by the addition of IFN-γ (30 ± 10 pg/ml in the four independent experiments above). Besides being observed as actual cytokine production, this lower response was also observed as specific IL-12 p40 mRNA transcript and was not associated with hyperproduction of the IL-12-competing cytokine IL-10. Phagocytosis and killing experiments in the presence of cytochalasin D showed that IL-12 production by Y cell-stimulated monocytes was phagocytosis dependent and that GT cells of
C. albicans
were not phagocytized by the human monocytes. Importantly, however, Y and GT cells were equally killed by the monocytes. Thus, the virulence trait attributed to the Y-GT transition of
C. albicans
might also be related to the lack of induction by GT cells of a protective anticandidal immunity through defective IL-12 production.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
36 articles.
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