Biodiverse Histoplasma Species Elicit Distinct Patterns of Pulmonary Inflammation following Sublethal Infection

Acute pulmonary histoplasmosis in healthy individuals comprises most of the disease burden caused by the fungal pathogen Histoplasma. Fungal pneumonia is frequently delayed in diagnosis and treatment due to a prolonged period of quiescence early during infection. In this study, we used a murine resp...

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Main Authors: Grant S. Jones, Victoria E. Sepúlveda, William E. Goldman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2020-08-01
Series:mSphere
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00742-20
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spelling doaj-dbffa64d0a01419a957ad24c5338e7512020-11-25T01:22:18ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymSphere2379-50422020-08-0154e00742-2010.1128/mSphere.00742-20Biodiverse Histoplasma Species Elicit Distinct Patterns of Pulmonary Inflammation following Sublethal InfectionGrant S. JonesVictoria E. SepúlvedaWilliam E. GoldmanAcute pulmonary histoplasmosis in healthy individuals comprises most of the disease burden caused by the fungal pathogen Histoplasma. Fungal pneumonia is frequently delayed in diagnosis and treatment due to a prolonged period of quiescence early during infection. In this study, we used a murine respiratory model of histoplasmosis to investigate how different Histoplasma species modulate lung inflammation throughout the complete course of infection. We propose that a relatively low, sublethal inoculum is ideal to model acute pulmonary histoplasmosis in humans, primarily due to the quiescent stage of fungal growth that occurs in the lungs of mice prior to the initiation of inflammation. Our results reveal the unique course of lung immunity associated with divergent species of Histoplasma and imply that the progression of clinical disease is considerably more heterogeneous than previously recognized.Histoplasma is an endemic dimorphic fungus that can cause disease in healthy and immunocompromised individuals after the transition of inhaled spores into the facultative intracellular yeast form. There is substantial diversity among Histoplasma species, but it is not clear how this heterogeneity impacts the progression of pathology and cellular immune responses during acute respiratory infection, which represents the vast majority of histoplasmosis disease burden. After inoculating mice intranasally with a sublethal inoculum, we characterized the immune response to Histoplasma capsulatum (strain G186A) and Histoplasma ohiense (strain G217B) using comprehensive flow cytometric and single-cell analyses. Within 8 days after inoculation, H. ohiense induced a significantly higher infiltration of neutrophils and inflammatory monocytes into the lung compared to H. capsulatum. Microscopic analysis of infected lung tissue revealed that although the total number of fungi was similar within inflamed lung lesions, we observed different species-dependent intracellular yeast distribution patterns. Inoculation with gfp-expressing strains indicated that H. ohiense, but not H. capsulatum, was associated primarily with alveolar macrophages early after infection. Interestingly, we observed a significant reduction in the total number of alveolar macrophages 12 to 16 days after H. ohiense, but not H. capsulatum infection, despite similar intracellular growth dynamics within AMJ2-C11 alveolar macrophages in vitro. Together, our data suggest that H. ohiense, but not H. capsulatum, preferentially interacts with alveolar macrophages early after infection, which may lead to a different course of inflammation and resolution despite similar rates of fungal clearance.https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00742-20histoplasmaalveolar macrophageshistoplasmosisinflammationlung infectionrespiratory pathogensspecies diversity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Grant S. Jones
Victoria E. Sepúlveda
William E. Goldman
spellingShingle Grant S. Jones
Victoria E. Sepúlveda
William E. Goldman
Biodiverse Histoplasma Species Elicit Distinct Patterns of Pulmonary Inflammation following Sublethal Infection
mSphere
histoplasma
alveolar macrophages
histoplasmosis
inflammation
lung infection
respiratory pathogens
species diversity
author_facet Grant S. Jones
Victoria E. Sepúlveda
William E. Goldman
author_sort Grant S. Jones
title Biodiverse Histoplasma Species Elicit Distinct Patterns of Pulmonary Inflammation following Sublethal Infection
title_short Biodiverse Histoplasma Species Elicit Distinct Patterns of Pulmonary Inflammation following Sublethal Infection
title_full Biodiverse Histoplasma Species Elicit Distinct Patterns of Pulmonary Inflammation following Sublethal Infection
title_fullStr Biodiverse Histoplasma Species Elicit Distinct Patterns of Pulmonary Inflammation following Sublethal Infection
title_full_unstemmed Biodiverse Histoplasma Species Elicit Distinct Patterns of Pulmonary Inflammation following Sublethal Infection
title_sort biodiverse histoplasma species elicit distinct patterns of pulmonary inflammation following sublethal infection
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mSphere
issn 2379-5042
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Acute pulmonary histoplasmosis in healthy individuals comprises most of the disease burden caused by the fungal pathogen Histoplasma. Fungal pneumonia is frequently delayed in diagnosis and treatment due to a prolonged period of quiescence early during infection. In this study, we used a murine respiratory model of histoplasmosis to investigate how different Histoplasma species modulate lung inflammation throughout the complete course of infection. We propose that a relatively low, sublethal inoculum is ideal to model acute pulmonary histoplasmosis in humans, primarily due to the quiescent stage of fungal growth that occurs in the lungs of mice prior to the initiation of inflammation. Our results reveal the unique course of lung immunity associated with divergent species of Histoplasma and imply that the progression of clinical disease is considerably more heterogeneous than previously recognized.Histoplasma is an endemic dimorphic fungus that can cause disease in healthy and immunocompromised individuals after the transition of inhaled spores into the facultative intracellular yeast form. There is substantial diversity among Histoplasma species, but it is not clear how this heterogeneity impacts the progression of pathology and cellular immune responses during acute respiratory infection, which represents the vast majority of histoplasmosis disease burden. After inoculating mice intranasally with a sublethal inoculum, we characterized the immune response to Histoplasma capsulatum (strain G186A) and Histoplasma ohiense (strain G217B) using comprehensive flow cytometric and single-cell analyses. Within 8 days after inoculation, H. ohiense induced a significantly higher infiltration of neutrophils and inflammatory monocytes into the lung compared to H. capsulatum. Microscopic analysis of infected lung tissue revealed that although the total number of fungi was similar within inflamed lung lesions, we observed different species-dependent intracellular yeast distribution patterns. Inoculation with gfp-expressing strains indicated that H. ohiense, but not H. capsulatum, was associated primarily with alveolar macrophages early after infection. Interestingly, we observed a significant reduction in the total number of alveolar macrophages 12 to 16 days after H. ohiense, but not H. capsulatum infection, despite similar intracellular growth dynamics within AMJ2-C11 alveolar macrophages in vitro. Together, our data suggest that H. ohiense, but not H. capsulatum, preferentially interacts with alveolar macrophages early after infection, which may lead to a different course of inflammation and resolution despite similar rates of fungal clearance.
topic histoplasma
alveolar macrophages
histoplasmosis
inflammation
lung infection
respiratory pathogens
species diversity
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00742-20
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