Summary Neutrophils and macrophages were generated in vitro from mice that display either high or low tissue susceptibilities to Candida albicans infection and their ability to phagocytose and kill three isolates of the yeast with different virulence characteristics was evaluated. In the absence of opsonization, phagocytosis by BALB/c and CBA/CaH neutrophils was comparable, but the killing was very poor. Opsonization with normal serum slightly decreased phagocytosis, but it had markedly different effects on killing, either enhancing or inhibiting candidacidal activity, depending on the combination of yeast isolate and mouse strain. In contrast, BALB/c macrophages showed high levels of phagocytosis and killing of both unopsonized yeasts and opsonized yeasts; whereas killing of unopsonized yeasts by CBA/CaH macrophages was poor, it was markedly enhanced by opsonization.Key words: killing, macrophage, neutrophil, opsonization, phagocytosis.
IntroductionPhagocytic cells are the first line of defence against Candida infections. 1-6 These cells are primarily responsible for the elimination of fungi from infected tissues and organs and quantitative or qualitative differences in their function may be responsible, at least in part, for the variations in susceptibility or resistance that have been documented in inbred strains of mice.Few studies have correlated the functional activity of phagocytic cells to the virulence characteristics of various isolates of Candida albicans. Candida strains derived from environmental sampling were more resistant to killing by human neutrophils than those isolated from humans or birds, but the properties of the yeasts that were associated with susceptibility and resistance were not identified. 7 A comparison of two Candida strains differing in cell surface hydrophobicity and in fibronectin (Fn) binding showed that the strain expressing a low hydrophobicity and low binding of soluble Fn was more resistant to neutrophil killing and persisted longer in i.p.-infected mice than the strain with a higher hydrophobicity and higher binding of soluble Fn, 8 and differences in other properties, such as proteinase production, are also associated with differential susceptibility to killing by phagocytic cells. 9 However, little is known about the relative efficiency of phagocytosis and killing of various Candida isolates by neutrophils and macrophages from different inbred strains of mice and its correlation to susceptibility and resistance.We have previously shown that three distinct isolates of C. albicans differ in their ability to establish both systemic and oral infections and in the specificity and protective effects of antibodies raised against them; 10 hence, the aims of this study were to compare phagocytosis and killing of these strains of C. albicans by neutrophils and macrophages from mice that showed mild (BALB/c) or severe (CBA/CaH) tissue damage 11 and to evaluate the effects of serum opsonins on these responses.
Materials and methods
MiceInbred female mice were purchased from the Anim...