REACTIVITY OF CANDIDA-ALBICANS GERM TUBES WITH SALIVARY SECRETORY IGA

Citation
J. Ponton et al., REACTIVITY OF CANDIDA-ALBICANS GERM TUBES WITH SALIVARY SECRETORY IGA, Journal of dental research, 75(12), 1996, pp. 1979-1985
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Dentistry,Oral Surgery & Medicine
Journal title
ISSN journal
00220345
Volume
75
Issue
12
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1979 - 1985
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-0345(1996)75:12<1979:ROCGTW>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
Salivary secretory IgA (sIgA) has been shown to react with a group of heat shock mannoproteins preferentially expressed on yeast cells grown at 37 degrees C. Since at this temperature C. albicans can induce ger m tubes, we explored the role of germ tube induction on human salivary sIgA reactivity in both germinative and agerminative C. albicans stra ins, in an attempt to investigate whether the germ tube expressed the heat shock mannoproteins reactive with sIgA. The reactivity with sIgA of the agerminative strain, grown at 25 and 37 degrees C for different times, was measured spectrofluorometrically and was fairly constant w ith time. Yeast cells grown at 37 degrees C tended to be more reactive than those grown at 25 degrees C. In contrast, when compared with the yeast cells of the germinative strain grown at 25 degrees C, there wa s a statistically significant decrease in reactivity with sIgA during germ tube formation. Serum IgA and IgG did not show statistically sign ificant changes in reactivity with C. albicans during germination, sug gesting differences in reactivity with C. albicans cell wall antigens between mucosal and systemic humoral responses. Cell wall mannoprotein s of molecular masses > 60 kDa were characterized by Western blotting as responsible for the decrease in sIgA reactivity observed in the ger m tube, and the fall in sIgA reactivity was related to the release of cell wall mannoproteins into the culture medium. The release of these mannoproteins may be a mechanism whereby C. albicans avoids the action of sIgA, and it may play an important role in the host-parasite relat ionship in oral candidiasis.