Identification of pathogen genomic differences that impact human immune response and disease during cryptococcus neoformans infection

dc.contributor.author Gerstein, Aleeza C.
dc.contributor.author Jackson, Katrina M.
dc.contributor.author McDonald, Tami R.
dc.contributor.author Wang, Yina
dc.contributor.author Lueck, Benjamin D.
dc.contributor.author Bohjanen, Sara
dc.contributor.author Smith, Kyle D.
dc.contributor.author Akampurira, Andrew
dc.contributor.author Meya, David B.
dc.contributor.author Xue, Chaoyang
dc.contributor.author Boulware, David R.
dc.contributor.author Nielsen, Kirsten
dc.date.accessioned 2025-07-03T10:36:40Z
dc.date.available 2025-07-03T10:36:40Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.description.abstract Patient outcomes during infection are due to a complex interplay between the quality of medical care, host immunity factors, and the infecting pathogen’s characteristics. To probe the influence of pathogen genotype on human survival, immune response, and other parameters of disease, we examined Cryptococcus neoformans isolates collected during the Cryptococcal Optimal Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) Timing (COAT) Trial in Uganda. We measured human participants’ survival, meningitis disease parameters, immunologic phenotypes, and pathogen in vitro growth characteristics. We compared those clinical data to whole-genome sequences from 38 C. neoformans isolates of the most frequently observed sequence type (ST), ST93, in our Ugandan participant population and to sequences from an additional 18 strains of 9 other sequence types representing the known genetic diversity within the Ugandan Cryptococcus clinical isolates. We focused our analyses on 652 polymorphisms that were variable among the ST93 genomes, were not in centromeres or extreme telomeres, and were predicted to have a fitness effect. Logistic regression and principal component analysis identified 40 candidate Cryptococcus genes and 3 hypothetical RNAs associated with human survival, immunologic response, or clinical parameters. We infected mice with 17 available KN99α gene deletion strains for these candidate genes and found that 35% (6/17) directly influenced murine survival. Four of the six gene deletions that impacted murine survival were novel. Such bedside-to-bench translational research identifies important candidate genes for future studies on virulence-associated traits in human Cryptococcus infections. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship National Institutes of Health, Canadian Institutes of Health Research Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship en_US
dc.identifier.citation Gerstein, A.C., Jackson, K.M., McDonald, T.R., Wang, Y., Lueck, B.D., Bohjanen, S., Smith, K.D., Akampurira, A., Meya, D.B., Xue, C., Boulware, D.R. (2019). Identification of pathogen genomic differences that impact human immune response and disease during cryptococcus neoformans infection. MBio. 2019, 10(4):10-128. en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mbio.01440-19
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10570/14627
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher American Society for Microbiology en_US
dc.subject Medical care quality en_US
dc.subject Host immunity factors en_US
dc.subject Pathogen genotype en_US
dc.subject Human survival en_US
dc.subject Immune response en_US
dc.subject Cryptococcus neoformans isolates en_US
dc.subject Uganda en_US
dc.subject Antiretroviral therapy en_US
dc.subject ART en_US
dc.subject HIV/AIDS en_US
dc.subject Meningitis en_US
dc.subject Genome analysis en_US
dc.title Identification of pathogen genomic differences that impact human immune response and disease during cryptococcus neoformans infection en_US
dc.type Article en_US
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