Human Antibodies against a Purified Glucosylceramide from Cryptococcus neoformans Inhibit Cell Budding and Fungal Growth

ML Rodrigues, LR Travassos, KR Miranda… - Infection and …, 2000 - Am Soc Microbiol
ML Rodrigues, LR Travassos, KR Miranda, AJ Franzen, S Rozental, W de Souza…
Infection and immunity, 2000Am Soc Microbiol
ABSTRACT A major ceramide monohexoside (CMH) was purified from lipidic extracts of
Cryptococcus neoformans. This molecule was analyzed by high-performance thin-layer
chromatography (HPTLC), gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry, and fast
atom bombardment-mass spectrometry. The cryptococcal CMH is a β-glucosylceramide,
with the carbohydrate residue attached to 9-methyl-4, 8-sphingadienine in amidic linkage to
2-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid. Sera from patients with cryptococcosis and a few other …
Abstract
A major ceramide monohexoside (CMH) was purified from lipidic extracts of Cryptococcus neoformans. This molecule was analyzed by high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC), gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry, and fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry. The cryptococcal CMH is a β-glucosylceramide, with the carbohydrate residue attached to 9-methyl-4,8-sphingadienine in amidic linkage to 2-hydroxyoctadecanoic acid. Sera from patients with cryptococcosis and a few other mycoses reacted with the cryptococcal CMH. Specific antibodies were purified from patients' sera by immunoadsorption on the purified glycolipid followed by protein G affinity chromatography. The purified antibodies to CMH (mainly immunoglobulin G1) bound to different strains and serological types of C. neoformans, as shown by flow cytofluorimetry and immunofluorescence labeling. Transmission electron microscopy of yeasts labeled with immunogold-antibodies to CMH and immunostaining of isolated cell wall lipid extracts separated by HPTLC showed that the cryptococcal CMH predominantly localizes to the fungal cell wall. Confocal microscopy revealed that the β-glucosylceramide accumulates mostly at the budding sites of dividing cells with a more disperse distribution at the cell surface of nondividing cells. The increased density of sphingolipid molecules seems to correlate with thickening of the cell wall, hence with its biosynthesis. The addition of human antibodies to CMH to cryptococcal cultures of both acapsular and encapsulated strains of C. neoformans inhibited cell budding and cell growth. This process was complement-independent and reversible upon removal of the antibodies. The present data suggest that the cryptococcal β-glucosylceramide is a fungal antigen that plays a role on the cell wall synthesis and yeast budding and that antibodies raised against this component are inhibitory in vitro.
American Society for Microbiology