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Keeping Candida commensal: how lactobacilli antagonize pathogenicity of Candida albicans in an in vitro gut model.

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TLDR
An in vitro gut model is established that can be used to experimentally dissect commensal-like interactions of C. albicans with a bacterial microbiota and the host epithelial barrier and fungal shedding is discovered as a novel mechanism by which bacteria contribute to the protection of epithelial surfaces.
Abstract
The intestine is the primary reservoir of Candida albicans that can cause systemic infections in immunocompromised patients. In this reservoir, the fungus exists as a harmless commensal. However, antibiotic treatment can disturb the bacterial microbiota, facilitating fungal overgrowth and favoring pathogenicity. The current in vitro gut models that are used to study the pathogenesis of C. albicans investigate the state in which C. albicans behaves as a pathogen rather than as a commensal. We present a novel in vitro gut model in which the fungal pathogenicity is reduced to a minimum by increasing the biological complexity. In this model, enterocytes represent the epithelial barrier and goblet cells limit C. albicans adhesion and invasion. Significant protection against C. albicans-induced necrotic damage was achieved by the introduction of a microbiota of antagonistic lactobacilli. We demonstrated a time-, dose- and species-dependent protective effect against C. albicans-induced cytotoxicity. This required bacterial growth, which relied on the presence of host cells, but was not dependent on the competition for adhesion sites. Lactobacillus rhamnosus reduced hyphal elongation, a key virulence attribute. Furthermore, bacterial-driven shedding of hyphae from the epithelial surface, associated with apoptotic epithelial cells, was identified as a main and novel mechanism of damage protection. However, host cell apoptosis was not the driving mechanism behind shedding. Collectively, we established an in vitro gut model that can be used to experimentally dissect commensal-like interactions of C. albicans with a bacterial microbiota and the host epithelial barrier. We also discovered fungal shedding as a novel mechanism by which bacteria contribute to the protection of epithelial surfaces.This article has an associated First Person interview with the joint first authors of the paper.

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Candidalysin is a Fungal Peptide Toxin Critical for Mucosal Infection and Immune Activation

TL;DR: This work identifies the first, to the authors' knowledge, fungal cytolytic peptide toxin in the opportunistic pathogen Candida albicans, which directly damages epithelial membranes, triggers a danger response signalling pathway and activates epithelial immunity.
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The gut, the bad and the harmless: Candida albicans as a commensal and opportunistic pathogen in the intestine

TL;DR: The commensal lifestyle of C. albicans in the intestine, the role of morphology for Commensalism, the influence of diet, and the interactions with bacteria of the microbiota are discussed.
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Exopolysaccharides as Antimicrobial Agents: Mechanism and Spectrum of Activity.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a comprehensive examination of the in vitro and in vivo antimicrobial activities of different exopolysaccharides (EPSs), mainly against foodborne bacterial, fungal, and viral pathogens.
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Adapting to survive: How Candida overcomes host-imposed constraints during human colonization.

TL;DR: The current knowledge and recent findings highlighting the remarkable ability of medically important Candida species to overcome a broad range of host-imposed constraints and how this directly affects their physiology and pathogenicity are reviewed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Gut Microbiota in Health and Disease

TL;DR: The advances in modeling and analysis of gut microbiota will further the authors' knowledge of their role in health and disease, allowing customization of existing and future therapeutic and prophylactic modalities.
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Intestinal epithelial cells: regulators of barrier function and immune homeostasis

TL;DR: This Review provides a comprehensive overview of how IECs maintain host–commensal microbial relationships and immune cell homeostasis in the intestine.
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Reciprocal Interactions of the Intestinal Microbiota and Immune System

TL;DR: Understanding how the adaptive immune system copes with the remarkable number and diversity of microbes that colonize the digestive tract, and how the system integrates with more primitive innate immune mechanisms to maintain immune homeostasis, holds considerable promise for new approaches to modulate immune networks to treat and prevent disease.
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Host interactions of probiotic bacterial surface molecules: comparison with commensals and pathogens

TL;DR: This Review highlights the documented signalling interactions of the surface molecules of probiotic bacteria (such as long surface appendages, polysaccharides and lipoteichoic acids) with PRRs with respect to host pattern recognition receptors of the gastrointestinal mucosa.
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