Publication | Open Access
Macrophage-independent Fungicidal Action of the Pulmonary Collectins
138
Citations
34
References
2003
Year
Acute Lung InjuryPulmonary CollectinsRespiratory ToxicologyImmunologyAutophagyPulmonary PharmacologyInfectious Respiratory DiseasePulmonary FibrosisMicrobiologyYeast PermeabilityHistoplasma CapsulatumHc YeastMedicineCell BiologyLung CancerPulmonary DiseasePhagocyte
Histoplasma capsulatum (Hc) is a facultative intracellular fungal pathogen that causes acute and chronic pneumonia. In this study, we investigated the role of the pulmonary collectins, surfactant proteins (SP) A and D, in the clearance of Hc yeast from the lung. Exposure of yeast to either collectin induced a dose-dependent decrease in [3H]leucine incorporation by several strains of Hc. This decrement was attributed to killing of the collectin-exposed yeast since it failed to grow on agar medium. Exposure to SP-A or -D resulted in increased yeast permeability based on a leak of protein from the organism and enhanced access of an impermeant substrate to intracellular alkaline phosphatase. Inbred and outbred SP-A null (-/-) mice were modestly more susceptible to pulmonary infection with Hc than strain and age-matched SP-A (+/+) control mice. The increase in susceptibility was associated with a decrement in the number of CD8+ cells in the lungs of SP-A-/- mice. Neither SP-A nor SP-D inhibited the growth of macrophage-internalized Hc. We conclude that the SP-A and SP-D are antimicrobial proteins that directly inhibit the growth of Hc by increasing permeability of the organism and that Hc gains asylum from collectin-mediated killing by rapid entry into pulmonary macrophages.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1