High-Throughput Screening Identifies Genes Required forCandida albicansInduction of Macrophage Pyroptosis
ABSTRACTThe innate immune system is the first line of defense against invasive fungal infections. As a consequence, many successful fungal pathogens have evolved elegant strategies to interact with host immune cells. For example,Candida albicansundergoes a morphogenetic switch coupled to cell wall remodeling upon phagocytosis by macrophages and then induces macrophage pyroptosis, an inflammatory cell death program. To elucidate the genetic circuitry through whichC. albicansorchestrates this host response, we performed the first large-scale analysis ofC. albicansinteractions with mammalian immune cells. We identified 98C. albicansgenes that enable macrophage pyroptosis without influencing fungal cell morphology in the macrophage, including specific determinants of cell wall biogenesis and the Hog1 signaling cascade. Using these mutated genes, we discovered that defects in the activation of pyroptosis affect immune cell recruitment during infection. Examining host circuitry required for pyroptosis in response toC. albicansinfection, we discovered that inflammasome priming and activation can be decoupled. Finally, we observed thatapoptosis-associatedspeck-like protein containing aCARD (ASC) oligomerization can occur prior to phagolysosomal rupture byC. albicanshyphae, demonstrating that phagolysosomal rupture is not the inflammasome activating signal. Taking the data together, this work defines genes that enable fungal cell wall remodeling and activation of macrophage pyroptosis independently of effects on morphogenesis and identifies macrophage signaling components that are required for pyroptosis in response toC. albicansinfection.IMPORTANCECandida albicansis a natural member of the human mucosal microbiota that can also cause superficial infections and life-threatening systemic infections, both of which are characterized by inflammation. Host defense relies mainly on the ingestion and destruction ofC. albicansby innate immune cells, such as macrophages and neutrophils. Although someC. albicanscells are killed by macrophages, most undergo a morphological change and escape by inducing macrophage pyroptosis. Here, we investigated theC. albicansgenes and host factors that promote macrophage pyroptosis in response to intracellular fungi. This work provides a foundation for understanding how host immune cells interact withC. albicansand may lead to effective strategies to modulate inflammation induced by fungal infections.