The WI-1 adhesin is indispensable for pathogenicity of Blastomyces dermatitidis and is thought to promote pulmonary infection by fixing yeast to lung tissue and cells. Recent findings suggest that WI-1 confers pathogenicity by mechanisms in addition to adherence. Here, we investigated whether WI-1 modulates host immunity by altering production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Production of TNF-α in lung alveolar fluids of mice infected with B. dermatitidis was severalfold higher for WI-1 knockout yeast compared with wild-type yeast, and in vitro coculture of unseparated lung cells with these isogenic yeast disclosed similar differences. Upon coculture with purified macrophages and neutrophils, wild-type yeast blocked TNF-α production, yet WI-1 knockout yeast stimulated production. Coating knockout yeast with purified WI-1 converted them from stimulating TNF-α production to inhibiting production. Addition of purified WI-1 into stimulated phagocyte cultures led to concentration-dependent inhibition of TNF-α production. Neutralization of TNF-α in vivo exacerbated experimental pulmonary infection, particularly for the nonpathogenic WI-1 knockout yeast. Inducing increased TNF-α levels in the lung by adenovirus-vectored gene therapy controlled infection with wild-type yeast. Thus, the WI-1 adhesin on yeast modulates host immunity through blocking TNF-α production by phagocytes, which fosters progression of pulmonary infection.
CITATION STYLE
Finkel-Jimenez, B., Wüthrich, M., Brandhorst, T., & Klein, B. S. (2001). The WI-1 Adhesin Blocks Phagocyte TNF-α Production, Imparting Pathogenicity on Blastomyces dermatitidis. The Journal of Immunology, 166(4), 2665–2673. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.166.4.2665
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