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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, December 2008, p. 1868-1877, Vol. 15, No. 12
1071-412X/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.00200-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

INSERM U799, Université Lille 2, Laboratoire de Parasitologie-Mycologie, Pôle de Microbiologie, CHRU Lille, and Faculté de Médecine, Pôle Recherche, Lille, France,1 Glycominds Ltd., Lod, Israel,2 Service de Réanimation Médicale, Hôpital Calmette, CHRU Lille, Lille, France,3 Laboratoire de Parasitologie, Faculté de Sciences Pharmaceutiques et Biologiques, Lille, France,4 Laboratoire de Biochimie et Biochimie-Moléculaire, Centre de Biologie Pathologie, CHRU Lille, 59037 Lille, France,5 EA 2689, Université de Lille 2, IMPRT, Faculté de Médecine, Lille, France,6 CHRU Lille, Hôpital Huriez, Service d'Hépato-Gastroentérologie and INSERM U795, Lille, France7
Received 18 May 2008/ Returned for modification 1 July 2008/ Accepted 17 October 2008
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Most ICIs are endogenous in origin, as revealed by genetic identity between strains isolated from the gut and blood cultures, as well as the link between gut colonization and invasive infection (31, 32, 48). Despite this link, however, little research has focused on C. albicans in its natural niche (9). Crohn's disease (CD) is an interesting topic for transversal research, since this chronic inflammatory bowel disease is generally agreed to be triggered by genetic susceptibility to gut microbiota (11). As the development of CD has also been linked to the sequential appearance of antibodies against microbial antigens (13, 23), we investigated whether anti-C. albicans antibodies were associated with this disease. Antibodies against Saccharomyces cerevisiae mannan (ASCA) are widely used as serological markers of CD (47). By using antibodies immunopurified on synthetic oligomannoses mimicking the major epitope of S. cerevisiae mannan supporting the ASCA response, we demonstrated that this epitope is overexpressed by the pathogenic phase of C. albicans. Subsequently, it was shown that ASCA are serological markers of C. albicans infections in humans and animals (16, 43).
Recently, screening of sera from patients with CD with a glycan array led to the identification of two new antiglycan antibodies as serological markers of this disease (10). The two antibodies are directed against molecular fragments corresponding to a laminaribioside (β1,3-linked glucose dimer) and chitobioside (β1,4-linked N-acetylglucosamine dimer) and have been labeled ALCA and ACCA, respectively, and complement the detection of ASCA as serological markers of CD. The combined detection of ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA was named IBDX, an acronym referring to inflammatory bowel diseases, since it improved the differential diagnosis of CD. The cumulative presence of these antibodies corresponded to complicated disease with a higher risk of surgery (13).
As well as ASCA, ALCA and ACCA could also be induced by C. albicans, since oligomers of β-D-1,3 glucose and β-1,4-linked N-acetylglucosamine are constitutive units of glucan and chitin, which are essential components of the yeast cell wall (17). The availability of the IBDX panel prompted us to investigate whether ALCA and ACCA, together with ASCA, could also be synthesized as a result of C. albicans infection. The presence of antiglucan and antichitin antibodies in patients infected by C. albicans has never been investigated, since these cell wall components were previously considered to be nonimmunogenic. We also investigated how IBDX tests complement anti-C. albicans mannan antibody and mannanemia detection tests for the diagnosis of ICI (38, 42).
(This work was presented in part at the IXth American Society for Microbiology Conference on Candida and Candidiasis, 23 to 27 March 2008, Jersey City, NJ.)
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TABLE 1. Clinical features of patients with systemic C. albicans infection
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Patients with Crohn's disease.
Patients were selected retrospectively from a previous study of families recruited through the Registre des Maladies Inflammatoires Chroniques de l'Intestin du Nord-Ouest de la France (EPIMAD) and the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Registry at the University Hospital, Gasthuisberg, Leuven, Belgium (46). A proband was selected from each family. The diagnosis of CD was based on the usual criteria, and phenotypes were defined according to the Montreal classification. A total of 59 CD patients (20 males and 39 females; median age, 45 years; age range, 20 to 82 years) were selected. The age at the diagnosis of CD was known for 58 patients: <17 years for 7 patients (12.1%), 17 to 40 years for 46 patients (79.3%), and
40 years for 5 patients (6.6%). The disease location was known for 57 patients: ileal (L1) in 10 patients (17.5%), colonic (L2) in 9 patients (15%), ileo-colonic (L3) in 37 patients (64.9%), and isolated upper disease (L4) in 1 patient (1.8%). Disease behavior was documented in 56 patients: nonstricturing, nonpenetrating (B1) in 27 patients (48.2%), stricturing (B2) in 18 patients (32.1%), penetrating (B3) in 11 patients (19.6%), and perianal in 20 patients (35.7%).
Control sera. Control sera consisted of 47 serum samples from patients (n = 47) with one or two body sites (trachea or sputum, urine, stool specimens, etc.) colonized by Candida species and hospitalized in the intensive care unit (ICU), and 131 sera from healthy blood donors (healthy controls [HC]).
Serological tests. (i) Detection of anti-C. albicans mannan antibodies and mannanemia. Antibodies to C. albicans mannan and mannanemia were detected using the Platelia Candida antibody (Ab) and Platelia Candida antigen (Ag) tests (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Marnes-la-Coquette, France) as described previously (41).
(ii) Detection of ASCA and antiglycan antibodies. All sera were assayed using a panel of tests that detect novel serological markers of CD (10). This panel, named IBDX (Glycominds, Israel), comprises ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA kits involving three antigens: S. cerevisiae mannan, laminaribioside, and chitobioside, respectively. para-Nitrophenyl derivatives of laminaribioside and chitobioside and S. cerevisiae mannan were covalently bound to the surfaces of microtiter wells with a linker (oligomer of 1,8-diamino-3,6-dioxaoctan; Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO). These tests were performed according to the manufacturer's instructions. ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA results were expressed in arbitrary units, which are relative to a Glycominds laboratory (gASCA, ALCA, ACCA) calibrators that are derived from a pool of patient sera with well-characterized disease. Antibody titers for each sample are calculated by dividing the average optical density (OD) of the sample by the average OD of the calibrator, multiplied by the number of units denoted by the calibrator tube label. The cutoff values were determined using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves to provide 97%, 100%, and 92% specificity for ACCA, ALCA, and ASCA, respectively, for CD.
(iii) Experimental C. albicans infection in rabbits and follow-up of antiglycan antibody responses. Three New Zealand White rabbits (2 to 3 kg) were inoculated intravenously with 500 µl of live C. albicans VW32 yeast cells (2 x 106 yeast cells/ml). Serum samples were obtained every week for 3 weeks and stored at –20°C. Antibodies against C. albicans mannan (Platelia Ab), S. cerevisiae mannan (ASCA), laminaribioside (ALCA), and chitobioside (ACCA) were detected by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), which was adapted for detection of rabbit immunoglobulin G (IgG) with classical washing and incubation steps. Sera were diluted 1:400 for Platelia Ab, ASCA, and ALCA tests and 1:200 for the ACCA test and incubated with the corresponding antigens. Antibody binding was detected using peroxidase-labeled goat anti-rabbit IgG (Zymed Laboratories Inc., San Francisco, CA) diluted 1:1,000 and tetramethylbenzidine as a substrate (Bio-Rad, Marnes-la-Coquette, France).
MAb against β-glucans. Monoclonal antibody (MAb) 2G8, a murine IgG2b reacting with β-glucan epitopes, was provided by A. Cassone (6). Dilutions of MAb 2G8 (1:500 to 1:16,000) were prepared from a concentration of 0.6 mg/ml and tested by ELISA on ALCA microtiter plates. One hundred microliters of each dilution was added to each well and incubated for 1 h at 37°C. After the wells were washed with TNT (50 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, HCl [pH 7.5], 0.05% Tween 20), 100 µl of horseradish peroxidase-conjugated antibodies (goat anti-mouse IgG; Southern Biotech) diluted 1:5,000 in TNT were added for 1 h at 37°C. After the wells were washed with TNT, each well received 100 µl of tetramethylbenzidine (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). After 30 min, the reaction was stopped by adding 100 µl of blocking reagent,and the plate was read at 450 nm. A MAb to Candida (EB-CA1), recognizing a mannopentaose (15), was used as a control.
Statistical analysis. As ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA were not normally distributed, the significance of differences between two independent groups was determined by the Mann-Whitney U test, and the significance of differences among more than two groups was determined by Kruskal-Wallis one-way analysis. In ICI patients, Spearman's rank correlation coefficients were calculated to estimate the interrelation between anti-yeast glycan antibodies or mannan levels and time. Antibody values were classified arbitrarily into four groups according to the time of serum sampling. The date of isolation of Candida species from blood culture was defined as day 0; group 1 included sera obtained during the period from day –25 to day –1, group 2 included sera obtained from day 0 to day +15, group 3 included sera obtained from day +16 to day +40, and group 4 included sera obtained from day +41 to day +154. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS for Windows version 11.0 (SPSS Inc.). A P value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
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FIG. 1. Distribution of ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA in healthy controls, patients with Crohn's disease, ICU patients with one or two body sites colonized by Candida species, and patients with invasive candidiasis. Comparison of the values for the different groups of patients was performed using the Mann-Whitney U test (P values). ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA results were expressed in arbitrary units (AU) (see Materials and Methods). For ASCA, a highly significant difference was observed for HC versus CD patients (P < 0.0001) and HC versus ICI patients, while the difference between CD versus ICI patients was not statistically significant (NS). For ALCA, a highly significant difference was observed for HC versus CD patients (P < 0.0001) and HC versus ICI patients (P < 0.0001), while no difference was observed for CD versus ICI patients. For ACCA, similar results were observed for HC versus CD patients (P = 0.001) and HC versus ICI patients (P < 0.0001). In contrast to ASCA and ALCA, a significant difference in ACCA was observed between ICI and CD patients (P = 0.05). The same trend was observed for CZ patients, and no difference was observed for HC versus CZ patients. The chemical structures of the antigens are presented to the right of each graph; for ALCA and ACCA, synthetic oligosaccharides are coated on the wells of the ELISA plates; ASCA* antigen is a natural antigen which comprises a repertoire of oligomannose epitopes, among these we have represented the major epitope supporting the humoral response in CD patients (39, 52), since this synthetic analog was shown to specifically adsorb antibodies generated during C. albicans infection (43).
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FIG. 2. (a) Development of anti-C. albicans mannan antibodies (Platelia Ab [Plat. Ab]), ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA in New Zealand White rabbits following intravenous inoculation of live C. albicans strain VW32. Results are expressed as mean ODs plus standard errors (error bars). D0, day 0. (b) Murine MAb 2G8 (gray bars) and MAb EB-CA1 (black bars) reactivities were determined by ELISA with laminaribioside, a synthetic analog of β-1,3 glucan involved in the ALCA test.
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ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA increase in individual sera as a result of C. albicans infection as do anti-C. albicans mannan antibodies. Anti-C. albicans antibody levels are known to increase during the transition of C. albicans from colonization to infection and are used as adjunct tests to blood cultures for the diagnosis of ICI. We therefore compared the Platelia Ab response to ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA levels during systemic C. albicans infection confirmed by positive blood culture. The results are shown in Fig. 3 a1, b1, c1, and d1. The correlation between antibody levels and the day when the sera were drawn was determined using Spearman's rank correlation coefficient. A correlation was observed for ACCA (P = 0.0018), ALCA (P = 0.019), and Platelia Ab (P = 0.02), demonstrating a link between C. albicans infection and an increase in these antiglycan antibodies. There was a trend toward an increase in ASCA levels during the disease, but it did not reach statistical significance. However, as shown in Fig. 3, panels 2 where sera are classified into four groups according to the date of sampling, this was related to the preferential association of ASCA with the acute phase and a more rapid decrease (Fig. 3, panel a2 versus panels b2, c3, and d2), whereas ACCA continued to increase several weeks after the onset of infection in rabbits.
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FIG. 3. Sixty-nine serum samples from 18 patients with invasive Candida infection (ICI) were screened for the presence of ASCA (a), ALCA (b), ACCA (c), and Platelia Ab (Plat. Ab) (d) as described in Materials and Methods. The antibody levels in arbitrary units (AU) (see Materials and Methods) are plotted according to the date of serum sampling (day 0 indicates the date of mycological isolation of C. albicans from blood). The horizontal line indicates the cutoff values used to define positive and negative results. The vertical line indicates day 0. Antibody values (mean titers plus standard errors [error bars]) for each test are also presented as histograms (panels a2, b2, c2, and d2) by classifying sera into four groups as follows: group 1 (G1) for sera taken during the period from day –25 to day –1, group 2 (G2) for sera taken from day 0 to day +15; group 3 for sera taken from day +16 to day +40; and group 4 for sera taken from day +41 to day +154.
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TABLE 2. Distribution of sera in relation to the date of isolation of C. albicans from blood (day 0) and number of positive results for each test and for a combination of tests
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TABLE 3. Results of mannanemia, antimannan antibodies, and IBDX tests in patients with invasive Candida infection
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FIG. 4. Examples of the kinetics of ASCA, ALCA, ACCA, and Platelia Candida Ag and Ab tests in patients with proven invasive candidiasis. For both patients, patient 14 (a) and patient 6 (b), a gradual decrease in ASCA, ALCA, and ACCA was observed during the period preceding positive blood cultures to reach a minimum on day 0. After the candidemic episode, an overall increase could be observed for most antibody markers during the proceeding weeks. For each y axis, the symbols on the axis indicate the cutoff values for serological tests. ASCA, ALCA, ACCA, and Platelia Candida Ab titers are given in arbitrary units (AU) (see Materials and Methods).
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An important observation from this study is that C. albicans infection generates antibodies that can be detected with chitin oligomers. The presence of human antibodies against chitin was investigated only when synthetic chitobioside was discovered to be a biomarker for CD (10). ACCA react with a minimal epitope composed of two units from a linear polymer of β-1,4-D-GlcNAc from chitin. Chitin is a component of the exoskeletons of arthropods, worm cuticles, protozoan cysts, and the cell walls of some algae, yeasts, and filamentous fungi (1, 35, 49). Due to the abundance of organisms in the human environment and food, the presence of antichitin antibodies is not surprising, even if the process of antibody generation is unknown.
In our study, we found low levels of ACCA in a high percentage of the control population. In yeasts, which are present in the human diet and human gut, chitin provides cross-linking and strength to the cell wall polysaccharide scaffolding. Increased chitin synthesis is a response to cell wall weakening (20). In C. albicans, the cell wall of the invasive hyphal form contains three times more chitin than the yeast form (36). In relation to the presence of low levels of ACCA in the control population, our study clearly demonstrates that two pathogenic situations result in an increase in ACCA, namely, CD and infection by C. albicans. In this latter pathology, kinetic analysis of antibody levels during the time course of the disease clearly demonstrated a causal relationship between C. albicans infection and increase in ACCA levels. In addition, we observed that the antichitobioside antibody response is maintained at high levels many weeks after the candidemic episode.
Few studies have dealt with the interaction between chitin and innate immunity receptors that could help in our understanding of the sensing of this component of living organisms (34). In contrast, β-glucans have received much more attention due to their immunomodulatory properties (45), and significant progress in our understanding of yeast sensing has followed the identification of Dectin-1, a specific receptor interacting with Toll-like receptor 2 to trigger a pro-inflammatory response (25). In clinical circumstances, sensitive detection assays have demonstrated that the presence of circulating glucans in patients sera is indicative of fungal invasion (27), and studies suggest that glucan could be a valuable marker of fungal infection (50). In contrast, very little attention has been paid to the antiglucan antibody response because glucans are not immunogenic. Recently, laminarin, an analog of fungal glucans synthesized by algae, coupled to proteins was shown to be an effective vaccine for generating antibodies that protect against C. albicans experimental infection (44).
In this study, we demonstrated that ALCA are also generated in some patients during C. albicans infection and in rabbits with experimental ICI. This is not surprising, since C. albicans cell wall glucans are linked to proteins (17) and are therefore able to induce an antibody response (3, 12). Until now, it has not been possible to detect human antibodies against glucans due to the lack of a reproducible test. The ALCA test provides a positive response to this obstacle.
Recent studies have shown that, as established for mannanemia (40), the levels of circulating serum β-1,3 glucans fluctuate during the course of the disease (26) so that biweekly examination of patients is recommended (29). Such fluctuations could be due to interaction of β-glucans with specific or scavenger receptors or with complement fraction 3 leading to activation of the alternative pathway (4). Our study suggests an additional mechanism based on the presence of high levels of anti-β-glucan antibodies that could accelerate glucan clearance through immune complexes. The sharp drop in anticarbohydrate antibody response observed around the time of blood culture suggests that the balance between mannanemia and antimannan antibodies observed previously in ICI patients (42) could also apply to glucanemia and antiglucan antibodies. Taking into account the fluctuations in ALCA response revealed in this study and fluctuations in glucanemia reported elsewhere (18), it would be worthwhile to investigate whether combined detection of serum glucans and ALCA could improve the sensitivity of diagnosis. Unfortunately, it was not possible to address the question of glucanemia in the present study because we could not guarantee the sterility of all serum samples.
A striking observation was that the nature of the glycan biomarkers can vary from patient to patient and during the time course of the disease. This raises the question of the pathophysiological significance of these antibodies and their role in protection or facilitation of infection (8).
With regard to ALCA, we observed that laminaribioside reacts with a MAb that has been shown to be protective in animal models of vaginal and systemic candidiasis. As far as ASCA are concerned, these antibodies are prominent markers of severe inflammation in CD, and recent evidence shows that they can be generated in mice after oral administration of C. albicans against an inflammatory background (16). This association with inflammation was also observed in the current study since, in most patients, ASCA presented a peak associated with the acute phase of the infection (Fig. 4) and a rapid decrease which contrasted with the more sustained generation of ACCA. The diagnostic value and clinical significance of these qualitative markers need to be validated in a large prospective study including more controls and other categories of at risk patients.
Pathophysiologically, mannans, glucans, and chitin may be synthesized individually by various microbes which have adapted to the human gut. However, yeasts are the only organisms known to synthesize large quantities of each of these glycans in a single envelope. The present demonstration that ASCA, ALCA, and ACAA can also be induced by C. albicans reinforces the serological observations, suggesting a link between this yeast and immune alterations observed in CD. In this respect, it is interesting to note that recent studies on the interleukin-23 Th17 pathway have revealed its major role in inflammatory bowel diseases (21), as well as in anti-C. albicans defense mechanisms (28), where triggering molecules include yeast cell wall glycans (24).
Whatever the relationship between C. albicans and CD, the availability of these tests complements the current panel of tests designed specifically for the diagnosis of candidiasis in providing an earlier and more specific diagnosis. Thus, the future of serological diagnosis appears to be based on the use of multiple antigens and currently available technologies (7). In the case of fungal cell wall carbohydrates, the ubiquitous distribution of chitin and glucans suggests that ALCA and ACCA tests may also contribute to the diagnosis of other invasive mycoses.
This work was supported by funds from the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Glycominds Ltd., and the network "INTESTINFO."
N.D. and A.D. are employees of Glycominds Ltd., Israel. There are no other conflicts of interest.
Published ahead of print on 29 October 2008. ![]()
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3) beta-D-glucan assay as an aid to diagnosis of fungal infections in humans. Clin. Infect. Dis. 41:654-659.[CrossRef][Medline]
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