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Aspergillus fumigatus: Growth and Virulence

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Life is very competitive in a compost pile. ... Darcey Smith. Amy Seitz. Lauren Fox. David Askew. Doug Boettner. Ruchi Bhabhra. Mike Miley. NIAID ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aspergillus fumigatus: Growth and Virulence


1
Aspergillus fumigatusGrowth and Virulence
  • Judith C. Rhodes, Ph.D.
  • University of Cincinnati
  • Cincinnati, OH, USA
  • judith.rhodes_at_uc.edu

2
Aspergillus fumigatus
  • Ubiquitous organism.
  • Most commonly reported opportunistic hyphomycete.
  • Important in compost cycle.
  • How did this grass eater become an opportunistic
    pathogen?

3
A. fumigatus Compost to Man
  • Life is very competitive in a compost pile.
  • What are some of the growth characteristics that
    enable A. fumigatus to be successful in the
    environment that may also allow it to be an
    opportunistic pathogen?

4
Growth Traits and Increased Competitiveness
  • Thermotolerance Ability to thrive at 37C.
  • Germination efficiency
  • Growth rate
  • Nutritional versatility Ability to sense and
    utilize nutrients in different forms and from
    difference sources.
  • Carbon
  • Nitrogen

5
Germination at 37C
  • Three most common pathogens in Aspergillus
    fumigatus, flavus, niger.
  • Prevalence as pathogens correlates with
    germination rate at 37C.

Araujo Rodrigues. 2004. J Clin Microbiol
424335.
6
Germination Rate
  • Correlation is specific to temperature,
    germination rate at elevated temperature is what
    correlates with prevalence.
  • Organism must germinate efficiently at body
    temperature to have the opportunity to be a
    mammalian pathogen.

Araujo Rodrigues. 2004. J Clin Microbiol
424335.
7
Growth Rate Methods
  • Radial growth.
  • Biomass.
  • Turbidity.
  • Dry weight.
  • Not all methods give the same answers.

TOTAL 1 x104 CONIDIA
MEASURE DIAMETER AT 24 AND 48 HOURS
8
RasB Radial growth/Biomass and Virulence
9
Biomass (turbidity) and Virulence
Paisley, et al. 2005. Med Mycol 43397.
10
CgrA 37C Radial Growth
Bhabhra, et al. 2004. Infect Immun 724731.
11
CgrA Virulence
Flies
Mice
Bhabhra, et al. 2004. Infect Immun 724731.
12
ThtA gt37C Growth Virulence
thtA-
Chang, et al. 2004. Fung Genet Biol 41888.
13
Thermotolerance
  • To be a mammalian pathogen, efficient germination
    and good growth at 37C are required, but high
    temperature growth, gt42C may not be.

14
Nutritional Versatility Compost to Man
  • A. fumigatus plays a key role in recycling C and
    N in compost.
  • Carbon sensing and utilization pkaR and sakA.
  • Nitrogen sensing and utilization rhbA, areA,
    cpcA, sakA.
  • Auxotrophies pabaA, pyrG, lysF.

15
PKA Carbon Signaling and Growth
  • In S. cerevisiae, mutants with hyperactive
    cAMP/PKA signaling are unable to utilize
    non-fermentable carbon sources.
  • In A. fumigatus, ?pkaR mutants are more growth
    impaired on glycerol, than on glucose.
  • In A. fumigatus, PKA activity is high in the
    presence of glucose, but low in the presence of
    glycerol.
  • Addition of cAMP to glycerol grown cultures of A.
    fumigatus results in increased PKA activity.

16
Carbon Signaling Regulation of alcA
Ethanol
Glucose
creA
creA
A
A
C
C
alcA
alcR
alcR
17
PkaR C Sensing and Signaling
  • In the wild type, alcA message is induced over
    10-fold in response to ethanol, whereas in the
    DpkaR strain, alcA message was unchanged.
  • The lack of alcA induction may indicate that
    carbon catabolite repression is constitutively
    engaged in the DpkaR strain.
  • Carbon sensing and/or signaling is perturbed in
    ?pkaR mutant.

Ethanol
18
PkaR Virulence
19
RhbA Sensing Nitrogen Quality
  • RhbA functions upstream in the TOR growth and
    nutrient sensing pathway.
  • RhbA responds to N quality and quantity.

plt0.05, plt0.01
Panepinto, et al. 2003. Infect Immun 712819.
20
Regulation of rhbA Nitrogen quantity
Zhang, et al. 2005. Mycopathologia 160201.
Panepinto, et al. 2002. Fung Genet Biol 36207.
21
RhbA Virulence
  • Virulence data and in vivo expression data
    combine to suggest that high quality N is not
    readily available in the host.
  • Counter-intuitive.


Panepinto, et al. 2003. Infect Immun 712819.
22
Auxotrophies and virulence
  • Numerous auxotropies have been shown to decrease
    virulence in A. fumigatus.
  • Suggests that some nutritional elements are in
    short supply in the host.

23
LysF Growth and Virulence
?lysF
?lysF
Liebman, et al. 2004. Arch. Microbiol. 181378.
24
PabaA Virulence
PABA stopped
Brown, et al. 2000. Mol Microbiol 364731.
25
How Did a Grass Eater Become an Opportunistic
Pathogen?
  • Living in a compost pile translated into the
    ability to
  • Germinate and grow efficiently at 37C, i.e.,
    thermotolerance.
  • Sense and utilize a variety of carbon and
    nitrogen sources.
  • Make its own building block when necessary.
  • Make many conidia to compete in a hostile
    environment.
  • Sometimes what makes a good grass eater can also
    make a good opportunistic pathogen.

26
Acknowledgements
  • Brian Oliver
  • John Panepinto
  • Jarrod Fortwendel
  • Wei Zhao
  • Tom Amlung
  • Darcey Smith
  • Amy Seitz
  • Lauren Fox
  • David Askew
  • Doug Boettner
  • Ruchi Bhabhra
  • Mike Miley
  • NIAID
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