Published in Volume
96, Issue 2 (August 1995)
J Clin Invest. 1995;96(2):1010–1017.
doi:10.1172/JCI118086.
Copyright ©
1995, The American Society for
Clinical Investigation.
Research Article
Murine laminin binds to Histoplasma capsulatum. A possible mechanism of dissemination.
J P McMahon, J Wheat, M E Sobel, R Pasula, J F Downing and W J Martin, 2nd
Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis 46202, USA.
Published August 1995
Histoplasmosis, an increasingly important opportunistic infection in immunosuppressed subjects, is characterized by hematogenous dissemination of the yeast from the lung. The mechanism of this dissemination is not fully understood. Laminin, the major glycoprotein of the extracellular matrix, is known to mediate the attachment of various invasive pathogens to host tissues. In the current study, laminin is demonstrated to bind to Histoplasma capsulatum in a rapid, specific, and saturable manner. Scatchard analysis with 125I-labeled laminin revealed an estimated 3.0 x 10(4) binding sites per yeast with an apparent Kd for laminin binding of 1.6 x 10(-9) M. Laminin binding to H. capsulatum was decreased from 62 +/- 1 to 17 +/- 1 ng (P < 0.001) in the presence of 3,000 nM of Ile-Lys-Val-Ala-Val, a pentapeptide within one major cell attachment site of laminin. A 50-kD H. capsulatum laminin-binding protein was demonstrated using an 125I-Ln blot of H. capsulatum cell wall proteins. The 50-kD protein is also recognized by antibodies directed at the 67-kD laminin receptor, suggesting they are related. This study proposes a possible mechanism for H. capsulatum attachment to laminin, an important first step required for the yeast to recognize and traverse the basement membrane.
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