Impaired neutrophil extracellular trap-forming capacity contributes to susceptibility to chronic vaginitis in a mouse model of vulvovaginal candidiasis

Author:

Yano Junko1,Fidel Paul L.ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oral and Craniofacial Biology, Louisiana State University Health, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), caused by Candida albicans, is characterized by aberrant inflammation by polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) in the vaginal lumen. Data from the established murine model shows that despite potent antifungal properties, PMNs fail to clear C. albicans due to local heparan sulfate that inhibits the interaction between PMNs and C. albicans , resulting in chronic vaginal immunopathology. To understand the role of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in defense against C. albicans at the vaginal mucosa, we investigated the NET-forming capacity of PMNs in chronic VVC-susceptible (CVVC-S/C3H) and -resistant (CVVC-R/CD-1) mouse strains. Immunofluorescence revealed the formation of NETs (release of DNA with PMN-derived antimicrobial proteins) in PMN –C. albicans cocultures using vaginal conditioned medium (VCM) generated from CVVC-R/CD-1 mice, similar to NET-inducing positive controls. Under these NETotic conditions, PMNs released high levels of double-stranded DNA bound with NET-associated proteins, concomitant with substantial C. albicans killing activity. In contrast, PMN –C. albicans cocultures in VCM from CVVC-S/C3H mice lacked NET formation together with reduced antifungal activity. Similar results were observed in vivo : active NET –C. albicans interaction followed by fungal clearance in inoculated CVVC-R/CD-1 mice, and sustained high vaginal fungal burden and no evidence of NETs in inoculated CVVC-S/C3H mice. Furthermore, the level of Ki67 expression, a putative NETotic PMN marker, was significantly reduced in vaginal lavage fluid from CVVC-S/C3H mice compared to CVVC-R/CD-1 mice. Finally, scanning electron microscopy revealed that PMNs in CVVC-R, but not CVVC-S, conditions exhibited NETs in direct contact with C. albicans hyphae in vitro and in vivo . These results suggest that VVC-associated immunopathology includes impaired NET-mediated antifungal activity.

Funder

LSU Health Foundation

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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