Abstract

β-1,3-d-Glucan is a ubiquitous glucose polymer produced by plants, bacteria, and most fungi. It has been used as a diagnostic tool in patients with invasive mycoses via a highly-sensitive reagent consisting of the blood coagulation system of horseshoe crab. However, no method is currently available for measuring β-1,6-glucan, another primary β-glucan structure of fungal polysaccharides. Herein, we describe the development of an economical and highly-sensitive and specific assay for β-1,6-glucan using a modified recombinant endo-β-1,6-glucanase having diminished glucan hydrolase activity. The purified β-1,6-glucanase derivative bound to the β-1,6-glucan pustulan with a KD of 16.4 nm. We validated the specificity of this β-1,6-glucan probe by demonstrating its ability to detect cell wall β-1,6-glucan from both yeast and hyphal forms of the opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans, without any detectable binding to glucan lacking the long β-1,6-glucan branch. We developed a sandwich ELISA-like assay with a low limit of quantification for pustulan (1.5 pg/ml), and we successfully employed this assay in the quantification of extracellular β-1,6-glucan released by >250 patient-derived strains of different Candida species (including Candida auris) in culture supernatant in vitro. We also used this assay to measure β-1,6-glucan in vivo in the serum and in several organs in a mouse model of systemic candidiasis. Our work describes a reliable method for β-1,6-glucan detection, which may prove useful for the diagnosis of invasive fungal infections.

Highlights

  • ␤-1,3-D-Glucan is a ubiquitous glucose polymer produced by plants, bacteria, and most fungi

  • We focused on the endo-␤-1,6-glucanase (EC 3.2.1.75), which is classified into glycoside hydrolase (GH) families 5 and 30 in the Carbohydrate-Active enZymes database (CAZy; RRID: SCR_012909)

  • Because no information exists with regard to the ability of all C. albicans strains to produce ␤-1,6glucan, we examined levels of ␤-1,6-glucan in 32 strains of C. albicans obtained from NITE Biological Resource Center (NBRC) (n ϭ 9) and the Kyorin University Hospital (n ϭ 23)

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Summary

Introduction

␤-1,3-D-Glucan is a ubiquitous glucose polymer produced by plants, bacteria, and most fungi. We developed a sandwich ELISA-like assay with a low limit of quantification for pustulan (1.5 pg/ml), and we successfully employed this assay in the quantification of extracellular ␤-1,6-glucan released by >250 patient-derived strains of different Candida species (including Candida auris) in culture supernatant in vitro. We used this assay to measure ␤-1,6-glucan in vivo in the serum and in several organs in a mouse model of systemic candidiasis. One of the most common pathogenic fungal species, Candida albicans, releases a soluble mannoprotein–␤-glucan complex that can activate limulus factor G [16] We hypothesized that if a tool to quantify ␤-1,6-glucan was developed, it would be useful to compensate for the shortcomings of the LAL test, and it may provide a potential avenue for future diagnostic test development in clinical practice

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