Abstract

Invasive candidiasis is the 4th leading cause of nosocomial bloodstream infection in the US with mortality that exceeds 40% despite administration of antifungal therapy; neutropenia is a major risk factor for poor outcome after invasive candidiasis. In a fatal mouse model of invasive candidiasis that mimics human bloodstream-derived invasive candidiasis, the most highly infected organ is the kidney and neutrophils are the major cellular mediators of host defense; however, factors regulating neutrophil recruitment have not been previously defined. Here we show that mice lacking chemokine receptor Ccr1, which is widely expressed on leukocytes, had selectively impaired accumulation of neutrophils in the kidney limited to the late phase of the time course of the model; surprisingly, this was associated with improved renal function and survival without affecting tissue fungal burden. Consistent with this, neutrophils from wild-type mice in blood and kidney switched from Ccr1lo to Ccr1high at late time-points post-infection, when Ccr1 ligands were produced at high levels in the kidney and were chemotactic for kidney neutrophils ex vivo. Further, when a 1∶1 mixture of Ccr1+/+ and Ccr1−/− donor neutrophils was adoptively transferred intravenously into Candida-infected Ccr1+/+ recipient mice, neutrophil trafficking into the kidney was significantly skewed toward Ccr1+/+ cells. Thus, neutrophil Ccr1 amplifies late renal immunopathology and increases mortality in invasive candidiasis by mediating excessive recruitment of neutrophils from the blood to the target organ.

Highlights

  • Invasive candidiasis, mainly caused by the opportunistic yeast Candida albicans, is the fourth leading cause of nosocomial bloodstream infection in the US and worldwide [1]

  • We performed a broad survey of the chemokine system in a mouse model of invasive candidiasis with an aim to determine factors that regulate neutrophil trafficking to sites of infection

  • The effect of Ccr1 on neutrophil accumulation in the kidney was not seen until the late phase of the infection, when the receptor was up-regulated on the neutrophil surface

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Summary

Introduction

Mainly caused by the opportunistic yeast Candida albicans, is the fourth leading cause of nosocomial bloodstream infection in the US and worldwide [1]. Vaccines are not available and despite administration of potent antifungal treatment, mortality of invasive candidiasis patients exceeds 40% [1,4]. A mouse model has been used extensively to study invasive candidiasis. Mice develop renal failure and septic shock [5], similar to humans with invasive candidiasis [4], and the kidney is the primary target organ [5,6]. Several studies in this model have established the importance of innate immunity in anti-

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