Msb2 shedding protects Candida albicans against antimicrobial peptides.
Szafranski-Schneider. Eva E; Swidergall. Marc M; Cottier. Fabien F; Tielker. Denis D; Román. Elvira E; Pla. Jesus J; Ernst. Joachim F JF
Key Findings
- Candida albicans sheds a heavily glycosylated extracellular fragment of Msb2 into its environment
- The secreted Msb2 fragment binds and inactivates antimicrobial peptides like LL‑37 without degrading them
- Msb2‑deficient C. albicans mutants are highly sensitive to LL‑37, showing the fragment’s key role in protection
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, this means LL‑37’s antimicrobial power can be blocked by certain fungal proteins, so its effectiveness against fungal infections may vary. While the study doesn’t give a new protocol, it suggests that targeting Msb2 shedding or its sugar coating could boost LL‑37’s activity, a potential area for future experimentation.
Summary
The fungus Candida albicans releases a large sugar‑coated piece of a protein called Msb2 that can bind and neutralize the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, stopping it from killing the fungus. This protection isn’t because the peptide is broken down, but because the Msb2 fragment blocks its activity. Fungi lacking Msb2 are much more vulnerable to LL‑37.
Abstract
Msb2 is a sensor protein in the plasma membrane of fungi. In the human fungal pathogen C. albicans Msb2 signals via the Cek1 MAP kinase pathway to maintain cell wall integrity and allow filamentous growth. Msb2 doubly epitope-tagged in its large extracellular and small cytoplasmic domain was efficiently cleaved during liquid and surface growth and the extracellular domain was almost quantitatively released into the growth medium. Msb2 cleavage was independent of proteases Sap9, Sap10 and Kex2. Secreted Msb2 was highly O-glycosylated by protein mannosyltransferases including Pmt1 resulting in an apparent molecular mass of >400 kDa. Deletion analyses revealed that the transmembrane region is required for Msb2 function, while the large N-terminal and the small cytoplasmic region function to downregulate Msb2 signaling or, respectively, allow its induction by tunicamycin. Purified extracellular Msb2 domain protected fungal and bacterial cells effectively from antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) histatin-5 and LL-37. AMP inactivation was not due to degradation but depended on the quantity and length of the Msb2 glycofragment. C. albicans msb2 mutants were supersensitive to LL-37 but not histatin-5, suggesting that secreted rather than cell-associated Msb2 determines AMP protection. Thus, in addition to its sensor function Msb2 has a second activity because shedding of its glycofragment generates AMP quorum resistance.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-02-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.ppat.1002501
84
59