Abstract
SUMMARYPhenotypic heterogeneity is a common microbial strategy to improves fitness in fluctuating environments. The fungal pathogenCryptococcus neoformansexhibits dramatic size heterogeneity: it varies from 2-100 μm in diameter during mammalian infection. Following pulmonary invasion, cells enlarge to >30 μm diameter, then decrease over disease course. Extrapulmonary organs, particularly the brain, contain uniformly small cells, implying that that morphotype is important for dissemination. To test this hypothesis, we isolated size-basedex vivocell populations directly from mouse lungs. Smallex vivocells readily disseminated compared with otherex vivopopulations, small beads, andin vitro-grown small cells. The latter two groups are close in size to smallex vivocells, suggesting that while size is important, fungal-specific elements also drive extrapulmonary dissemination. We found that mannose exposure facilitates host cell interaction and organ uptake. Phosphate induces small cell formation. This demonstrates how environmental cues shift phenotypic heterogeneity to drive pathogenesis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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