Transcriptomic analysis of non-invasive infections by Aspergillus fumigatus: The case of sino-nasal aspergillosis (SNA) in dogs

Objective: The form of human fungal sinusitis that most closely approximates the disease occurring in the dog is chronic erosive non-invasive fungal sinusitis. This disease is characterized by final destruction of bone in the absence of tissue invasion by the fungus and requires both removal of fungal plaques, necrotic tissue and medical therapy with antifungals. Remarkably, these fungal plaques are white indicated that asexual development does not proceed in the patients. Immune response in SNA infections has been studied via biopsy and cytokine profiling as well as transcriptomic analysis of... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Valdes, I.D.
Wösten, H.A.B.
De Cock, H.
Dokumenttyp: Abstract
Erscheinungsdatum: 2018
Schlagwörter: antifungal agent / catalase / cytokine / endogenous compound / liquid nitrogen / superoxide dismutase / transcriptome / adult / animal experiment / animal model / animal tissue / asexual reproduction / aspergillosis / biofilm / biopsy / cleaning / conference abstract / controlled study / dog / drug therapy / endoscope / female / genetic transcription / immune response / male / Netherlands / nonhuman / RNA isolation / secondary metabolism / signal transduction / sporogenesis / stable expression / stress / surgery / virulence / Taverne
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26835656
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/369045

Objective: The form of human fungal sinusitis that most closely approximates the disease occurring in the dog is chronic erosive non-invasive fungal sinusitis. This disease is characterized by final destruction of bone in the absence of tissue invasion by the fungus and requires both removal of fungal plaques, necrotic tissue and medical therapy with antifungals. Remarkably, these fungal plaques are white indicated that asexual development does not proceed in the patients. Immune response in SNA infections has been studied via biopsy and cytokine profiling as well as transcriptomic analysis of the host tissue. However, a transcriptomic study of this fungal pathogen growing in patients causing a non-invasive infection has never being performed. We obtained fungal plaques directly from canine patients suffering from SNA and characterize the transcriptome of the causative fungus A. fumigatus in order understand gene expression in the context of the host and particularly in the field of in-host adaptation Methods: Four different fungal plaques were isolated from dogs suffering from SNA. After surgical removal using endoscope or trephination part of fungal plaques were immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80°C for RNA isolation and sequencing. RNA isolation was performed using RNeasy Mini Kit® from Qiagen and sequencing was performed by ServiceXS (Leiden, The Netherlands). RNA-seq analysis involved quality check with fastQC. Cleaning and trimming of reads with Fastx-toolkit. Kallisto was used for transcript quantification(TPM) with A. fumigatus Af293 (AspGD) as reference. For functional characterization of the transcriptome, highly variable expressed genes between samples were removed, and 3 subjective levels of expression were established: low (1 to 39.8 TPM), median (39.8 to 1584.8 TPM) and high (1584.8 to 79432.8 TPM), for each group an enrichment analysis was performed. Additionally a more targeted categorization of the transcriptome was done using published lists of genes involved in stress, ...