학술논문

Fungal biofilm morphology impacts hypoxia fitness and disease progression
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Microbiology. 4(12)
Subject
Microbiology
Biological Sciences
Infectious Diseases
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Infection
Animals
Aspergillosis
Aspergillus fumigatus
Biofilms
Disease Models
Animal
Disease Progression
Female
Fungal Proteins
Fungi
Hyphae
Hypoxia
Mice
Multigene Family
Virulence
Medical Microbiology
Language
Abstract
Microbial populations form intricate macroscopic colonies with diverse morphologies whose functions remain to be fully understood. Despite fungal colonies isolated from environmental and clinical samples revealing abundant intraspecies morphological diversity, it is unclear how this diversity affects fungal fitness and disease progression. Here we observe a notable effect of oxygen tension on the macroscopic and biofilm morphotypes of the human fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. A hypoxia-typic morphotype is generated through the expression of a subtelomeric gene cluster containing genes that alter the hyphal surface and perturb interhyphal interactions to disrupt in vivo biofilm and infection site morphologies. Consequently, this morphotype leads to increased host inflammation, rapid disease progression and mortality in a murine model of invasive aspergillosis. Taken together, these data suggest that filamentous fungal biofilm morphology affects fungal-host interactions and should be taken into consideration when assessing virulence and host disease progression of an isolated strain.