A computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in Candida albicans.

Candida albicans is a virulent human opportunistic pathogen. It evades innate immune surveillance by masking an immunogenic cell wall polysaccharide, β-glucan, from recognition by the immunoreceptor Dectin-1. Glucan unmasking by the antifungal drug caspofungin leads to changes in the nanostructure o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael J Wester, Jia Lin, Aaron K Neumann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5726713?pdf=render
id doaj-395edde4584848808f78959241ad3886
record_format Article
spelling doaj-395edde4584848808f78959241ad38862020-11-25T01:22:52ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011212e018859910.1371/journal.pone.0188599A computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in Candida albicans.Michael J WesterJia LinAaron K NeumannCandida albicans is a virulent human opportunistic pathogen. It evades innate immune surveillance by masking an immunogenic cell wall polysaccharide, β-glucan, from recognition by the immunoreceptor Dectin-1. Glucan unmasking by the antifungal drug caspofungin leads to changes in the nanostructure of glucan exposure accessible to Dectin-1. The physical mechanism that regulates glucan exposure is poorly understood, but it controls the nanobiology of fungal pathogen recognition. We created computational models to simulate hypothetical physical processes of unmasking glucan in a biologically realistic distribution of cell wall glucan fibrils. We tested the predicted glucan exposure nanostructural features arising from these models against experimentally measured values. A completely spatially random unmasking process, reflective of random environmental damage to the cell wall, cannot account for experimental observations of glucan unmasking. However, the introduction of partially edge biased unmasking processes, consistent with an unmasking contribution from active, local remodeling at glucan exposure sites, produces markedly more accurate predictions of experimentally observed glucan nanoexposures in untreated and caspofungin-treated yeast. These findings suggest a model of glucan unmasking wherein cell wall remodeling processes in the local nanoscale neighborhood of glucan exposure sites are an important contributor to the physical process of drug-induced glucan unmasking in C. albicans.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5726713?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael J Wester
Jia Lin
Aaron K Neumann
spellingShingle Michael J Wester
Jia Lin
Aaron K Neumann
A computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in Candida albicans.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michael J Wester
Jia Lin
Aaron K Neumann
author_sort Michael J Wester
title A computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in Candida albicans.
title_short A computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in Candida albicans.
title_full A computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in Candida albicans.
title_fullStr A computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in Candida albicans.
title_full_unstemmed A computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in Candida albicans.
title_sort computational model for regulation of nanoscale glucan exposure in candida albicans.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Candida albicans is a virulent human opportunistic pathogen. It evades innate immune surveillance by masking an immunogenic cell wall polysaccharide, β-glucan, from recognition by the immunoreceptor Dectin-1. Glucan unmasking by the antifungal drug caspofungin leads to changes in the nanostructure of glucan exposure accessible to Dectin-1. The physical mechanism that regulates glucan exposure is poorly understood, but it controls the nanobiology of fungal pathogen recognition. We created computational models to simulate hypothetical physical processes of unmasking glucan in a biologically realistic distribution of cell wall glucan fibrils. We tested the predicted glucan exposure nanostructural features arising from these models against experimentally measured values. A completely spatially random unmasking process, reflective of random environmental damage to the cell wall, cannot account for experimental observations of glucan unmasking. However, the introduction of partially edge biased unmasking processes, consistent with an unmasking contribution from active, local remodeling at glucan exposure sites, produces markedly more accurate predictions of experimentally observed glucan nanoexposures in untreated and caspofungin-treated yeast. These findings suggest a model of glucan unmasking wherein cell wall remodeling processes in the local nanoscale neighborhood of glucan exposure sites are an important contributor to the physical process of drug-induced glucan unmasking in C. albicans.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5726713?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT michaeljwester acomputationalmodelforregulationofnanoscaleglucanexposureincandidaalbicans
AT jialin acomputationalmodelforregulationofnanoscaleglucanexposureincandidaalbicans
AT aaronkneumann acomputationalmodelforregulationofnanoscaleglucanexposureincandidaalbicans
AT michaeljwester computationalmodelforregulationofnanoscaleglucanexposureincandidaalbicans
AT jialin computationalmodelforregulationofnanoscaleglucanexposureincandidaalbicans
AT aaronkneumann computationalmodelforregulationofnanoscaleglucanexposureincandidaalbicans
_version_ 1725125118381785088