Affiliation:
1. Molecular Microbiology Section, Laboratory of Clinical Infectious Diseases, NIAID, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
2. Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Cryptococcosis is caused by the opportunistic pathogen
Cryptococcus neoformans
or by the primary pathogen
Cryptococcus gattii
. Epidemiological studies suggest that patients infected with
C. gattii
mainly present with pulmonary disease, while those infected with
C. neoformans
commonly manifest meningoencephalitis. We compared the pathogenesis of the two species using the
C. neoformans
H99 and
C. gattii
R265 strains in a murine inhalation model.
C. neoformans
grew faster in the brain and caused death by meningoencephalitis, while
C. gattii
grew faster in the lungs and caused death without producing fulminating meningoencephalitis. Despite the consistent failure to recover R265 cells from blood, a fraction of the R265 population was detected in the extrapulmonary organs, including the brain. Upon intravenous (i.v. ) inoculation of 10
4
cells via the tail vein, however,
C. gattii
produced severe meningoencephalitis, demonstrating that
C. gattii
cells can efficiently cross the blood-brain barrier. Interestingly, i.v. inoculation with five cells caused brain infection in only 10% of
C. gattii
-infected mice, compared to 60% of mice infected with
C. neoformans
. In mice that had been initially inoculated via the pulmonary route and subsequently challenged intravenously, a protective effect was observed only in mice infected with
C. gattii
.
C. neoformans
cells grew 10 to 100 times faster than
C. gattii
cells in blood or serum collected from naive mice. The paucity of meningoencephalitis upon inhalation of
C. gattii
, therefore, may be partly due to an unknown factor(s) in the host’s blood coupled with immune protection that reduces dissemination to the brain and fosters lung infection.
IMPORTANCE
While
Cryptococcus neoformans
is the most common cause of fatal meningoencephalitis, especially in HIV patients,
Cryptococcus gattii
causes disease mainly in non-HIV patients. Clinical studies revealed that most patients infected with
C. gattii
VGII strains have lung infections with minimal brain involvement. Despite extensive clinicopathological studies on cryptococcosis in animal models, only a few have included
C. gattii
. We compared the pathogenesis of the two species in mice using an inhalation model. Similar to infection in humans, even though
C. gattii
can cross the blood-brain barrier, it failed to cause fatal meningoencephalitis but caused fatal lung infection. We show that growth of
C. gattii
in mouse blood is significantly slower than that of
C. neoformans
and that a secondary protective phenomenon, though weak, manifests itself only in
C. gattii
infection. Our study provides a model for understanding the clinicopathological differences between these two closely genetically related pathogens.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
127 articles.
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