Optimizing in vitro spherulation cues in the fungal pathogen Coccidioides.

IF 3.7 2区 生物学 Q2 MICROBIOLOGY mSphere Pub Date : 2025-01-28 Epub Date: 2024-12-17 DOI:10.1128/msphere.00679-24
Christina M Homer, Elena Ochoa, Mark Voorhies, Anita Sil
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Abstract

Coccidioides spp. are part of a group of thermally dimorphic fungal pathogens, which grow as filamentous cells (hyphae) in the soil and transform to a different morphology upon inhalation into the host. The Coccidioides host form, the spherule, is unique and highly undercharacterized due to both technical and biocontainment challenges. Each spherule arises from an environmental spore (arthroconidium), matures, and develops hundreds of internal endospores, which are released from the spherule upon rupture. Each endospore can then go on to form another spherule in a cycle called spherulation. One of the foremost technical challenges has been reliably growing spherules in culture without the formation of contaminating hyphae and consistently inducing endospore release from spherules. Here, we present optimization of in vitro spherule growth and endospore release, by closely controlling starting cell density in the culture, using freshly harvested arthroconidia, and decreasing the concentration of multiple salts in spherulation media. We developed a minimal medium to test spherule growth on various carbon and nitrogen sources. We defined a critical role for the dispersant Tamol in both early spherule formation and prevention of the accumulation of a visible film around spherules. Finally, we examined how the conditions under which arthroconidia are generated influence their transcriptome and subsequent development into spherules, demonstrating that this is an important variable to control when designing spherulation experiments. Together, our data reveal multiple strategies to optimize in vitro spherulation growth, enabling characterization of this virulence-relevant morphology.IMPORTANCECoccidioides spp. are thermally dimorphic fungal pathogens found in the Southwest United States, Mexico, Central America, and South America. Coccidioides can infect both immunocompetent and immunocompromised people and can cause a devastating disseminated infection, including meningitis, with 30% mortality despite all currently available treatments. In this work, we tackle one of the current largest technical barriers to studying the fungus Coccidioides: reliably growing its host form in vitro. Our work is impactful because we have created a set of foundational tools for the burgeoning field of Coccidioides pathogenesis research. We have carefully optimized conditions that allow the development of Coccidioides in vitro into its pathogenic form. This work will open up many lines of investigation into the molecules that underlie Coccidioides pathogenesis.

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球虫真菌病原菌体外球化线索的优化。
球虫是一类热二形真菌病原体的一部分,它们在土壤中以丝状细胞(菌丝)的形式生长,并在吸入宿主后转变为不同的形态。球虫的寄主形式,球形,是独特的,由于技术和生物控制的挑战,高度不充分的特征。每个小球粒起源于一个环境孢子(节分生孢子),成熟并发育出数百个内部内生孢子,孢子破裂后从小球粒中释放出来。每个内孢子可以继续形成另一个球体,这个循环叫做球化。最重要的技术挑战之一是在不形成污染菌丝的情况下可靠地培养球粒,并始终诱导球粒释放孢子。在这里,我们通过严格控制培养中的起始细胞密度,使用新鲜收获的关节孢子,并降低球粒培养基中多种盐的浓度,来优化体外球粒生长和孢子内释放。我们开发了一种最小的培养基来测试各种碳和氮源的球粒生长。我们定义了分散剂Tamol在早期球粒形成和防止球粒周围可见膜积累中的关键作用。最后,我们研究了关节孢子产生的条件如何影响它们的转录组和随后的球粒发育,表明这是设计球粒实验时需要控制的一个重要变量。总之,我们的数据揭示了优化体外球团生长的多种策略,使这种毒力相关形态的表征成为可能。cicidiides spp.是在美国西南部、墨西哥、中美洲和南美洲发现的热二态真菌病原体。球虫可感染免疫正常和免疫功能低下的人,并可引起毁灭性的播散性感染,包括脑膜炎,尽管目前有所有可用的治疗方法,但仍有30%的死亡率。在这项工作中,我们解决了目前研究真菌球虫的最大技术障碍之一:在体外可靠地培养其宿主形式。我们的工作是有影响力的,因为我们已经为球虫发病机制研究的新兴领域创造了一套基础工具。我们精心优化了条件,使球虫在体外发育成致病形式。这项工作将为球虫发病机制的分子研究开辟许多途径。
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来源期刊
mSphere
mSphere Immunology and Microbiology-Microbiology
CiteScore
8.50
自引率
2.10%
发文量
192
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: mSphere™ is a multi-disciplinary open-access journal that will focus on rapid publication of fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. Its scope will reflect the immense range of fields within the microbial sciences, creating new opportunities for researchers to share findings that are transforming our understanding of human health and disease, ecosystems, neuroscience, agriculture, energy production, climate change, evolution, biogeochemical cycling, and food and drug production. Submissions will be encouraged of all high-quality work that makes fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. mSphere™ will provide streamlined decisions, while carrying on ASM''s tradition for rigorous peer review.
期刊最新文献
Prospective comparison of the digestive tract resistome and microbiota in cattle raised in grass-fed versus grain-fed production systems. Prophages are infrequently associated with antibiotic resistance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa clinical isolates. Virus-induced perturbations in the mouse microbiome are impacted by microbial experience. Abundance of clinically relevant antimicrobial resistance genes in the golden jackal (Canis aureus) gut. Characterization of diet-linked amino acid pool influence on Fusobacterium spp. growth and metabolism.
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