Abstract

A large portion of biological iron is found in the form of an iron-protoporphyrin IX complex, or heme. In the human host environment, which is exceptionally poor in free iron, heme iron, particularly from hemoglobin, constitutes a major source of iron for invading microbial pathogens. Several fungi were shown to utilize free heme, and Candida albicans, a major opportunistic pathogen, is able both to capture free heme and to extract heme from hemoglobin using a network of extracellular hemophores. Human serum albumin (HSA) is the most abundant host heme-scavenging protein. Tight binding of heme by HSA restricts its toxic chemical reactivity and could diminish its availability as an iron source for pathogenic microbes. We found, however, that rather than inhibiting heme utilization, HSA greatly increases availability of heme as an iron source for C. albicans and other fungi. In contrast, hemopexin, a low-abundance but high-affinity heme-scavenging serum protein, does inhibit heme utilization by C. albicans However, inhibition by hemopexin is mitigated in the presence of HSA. Utilization of albumin-bound heme requires the same hemophore cascade as that which mediates hemoglobin-iron utilization. Accordingly, we found that the C. albicans hemophores are able to extract heme bound to HSA in vitro Since many common drugs are known to bind to HSA, we tested whether they could interfere with heme-iron utilization. We show that utilization of albumin-bound heme by C. albicans can be inhibited by the anti-inflammatory drugs naproxen and salicylic acid.IMPORTANCE Heme constitutes a major iron source for microorganisms and particularly for pathogenic microbes; to overcome the iron scarcity in the animal host, many pathogenic bacteria and fungi have developed systems to extract and take up heme from host proteins such as hemoglobin. Microbial heme uptake mechanisms are usually studied using growth media containing free heme or hemoglobin as a sole iron source. However, the animal host contains heme-scavenging proteins that could prevent this uptake. In the human host in particular, the most abundant serum heme-binding protein is albumin. Surprisingly, however, we found that in the case of fungi of the Candida species family, albumin promoted rather than prevented heme utilization. Albumin thus constitutes a human-specific factor that can affect heme-iron utilization and could serve as target for preventing heme-iron utilization by fungal pathogens. As a proof of principle, we identify two drugs that can inhibit albumin-stimulated heme utilization.

Highlights

  • A large portion of biological iron is found in the form of an ironprotoporphyrin IX complex, or heme

  • While wild-type strains are able to grow in 1 mM ferrozine, growth of the C. albicans ccc2Ϫ/Ϫ mutant, defective in high-affinity iron transport, is completely blocked in this medium and is completely dependent upon alternative iron sources such as hemin or hemoglobin [11]

  • We found that addition of 0.1 mM Human serum albumin (HSA), instead of inhibiting heme utilization, lowered the hemin concentration required to achieve optimal growth by almost 2 orders of magnitude, whereas the hemoglobin concentration required was lowered 4-fold (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

A large portion of biological iron is found in the form of an ironprotoporphyrin IX complex, or heme. In the human host environment, which is exceptionally poor in free iron, heme iron, from hemoglobin, constitutes a major source of iron for invading microbial pathogens. Human serum albumin (HSA) is the most abundant host heme-scavenging protein. That rather than inhibiting heme utilization, HSA greatly increases availability of heme as an iron source for C. albicans and other fungi. Hemopexin, a low-abundance but high-affinity heme-scavenging serum protein, does inhibit heme utilization by C. albicans. IMPORTANCE Heme constitutes a major iron source for microorganisms and for pathogenic microbes; to overcome the iron scarcity in the animal host, many pathogenic bacteria and fungi have developed systems to extract and take up heme from host proteins such as hemoglobin. Pathogenic bacteria and fungi can utilize free heme as an iron source, and many can extract and utilize heme bound to hemoglobin (reviewed in references 4 and 5). The major human serum protein, binds hemin, albeit at lower affinity than hemopexin; due to the 50-foldhigher molar concentration of human serum albumin (HSA) than of hemopexin, the majority of the released hemin is initially bound by albumin, and it is subsequently transferred to hemopexin only gradually [9]

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