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  • Lopes, Jose Pedro,1986-Umeå universitet,Klinisk bakteriologi,Molekylär Infektionsmedicin, Sverige (MIMS),Umeå Centre for Microbial Research (UCMR) (författare)

Opportunistic pathogen Candida albicans elicits a temporal response in primary human mast cells

  • Artikel/kapitelEngelska2015

Förlag, utgivningsår, omfång ...

  • 2015-07-20
  • Nature Publishing Group,2015
  • printrdacarrier

Nummerbeteckningar

  • LIBRIS-ID:oai:DiVA.org:umu-106777
  • https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-106777URI
  • https://doi.org/10.1038/srep12287DOI
  • http://kipublications.ki.se/Default.aspx?queryparsed=id:131641139URI

Kompletterande språkuppgifter

  • Språk:engelska
  • Sammanfattning på:engelska

Ingår i deldatabas

Klassifikation

  • Ämneskategori:ref swepub-contenttype
  • Ämneskategori:art swepub-publicationtype

Anmärkningar

  • Immunosuppressed patients are frequently afflicted with severe mycoses caused by opportunistic fungal pathogens. Besides being a commensal, colonizing predominantly skin and mucosal surfaces, Candida albicans is the most common human fungal pathogen. Mast cells are present in tissues prone to fungal colonization being expectedly among the first immune cells to get into contact with C. albicans. However, mast cell-fungus interaction remains a neglected area of study. Here we show that human mast cells mounted specific responses towards C. albicans. Collectively, mast cell responses included the launch of initial, intermediate and late phase components determined by the secretion of granular proteins and cytokines. Initially mast cells reduced fungal viability and occasionally internalized yeasts. C. albicans could evade ingestion by intracellular growth leading to cellular death. Furthermore, secreted factors in the supernatants of infected cells recruited neutrophils, but not monocytes. Late stages were marked by the release of cytokines that are known to be anti-inflammatory suggesting a modulation of initial responses. C. albicans-infected mast cells formed extracellular DNA traps, which ensnared but did not kill the fungus. Our results suggest that mast cells serve as tissue sentinels modulating antifungal immune responses during C. albicans infection. Consequently, these findings open new doors for understanding fungal pathogenicity.

Ämnesord och genrebeteckningar

Biuppslag (personer, institutioner, konferenser, titlar ...)

  • Stylianou, Marios,1981-Umeå universitet,Klinisk bakteriologi,Molekylär Infektionsmedicin, Sverige (MIMS),Umeå Centre for Microbial Research (UCMR)(Swepub:umu)mast0120 (författare)
  • Nilsson, GunnarKarolinska Institutet (författare)
  • Urban, Constantin F.Umeå universitet,Molekylär Infektionsmedicin, Sverige (MIMS),Umeå Centre for Microbial Research (UCMR),Klinisk bakteriologi(Swepub:umu)cour0001 (författare)
  • Umeå universitetKlinisk bakteriologi (creator_code:org_t)

Sammanhörande titlar

  • Ingår i:Scientific Reports: Nature Publishing Group52045-2322

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