Polymorphisms in Receptors Involved in Opsonic and Nonopsonic Phagocytosis, and Correlation with Risk of Infection in Oncohematology Patients.
M Carmen Herrero-SánchezEduardo B AngomásCristina de RamónJuan J TelleríaLuis A CorcheteSara AlonsoM Del Carmen RamosMaría J PeñarrubiaSaioa MárquezNieves FernándezLuis J García FradeMariano Sanchez CrespoPublished in: Infection and immunity (2018)
High-risk hematological malignancies are a privileged setting for infection by opportunistic microbes, with invasive mycosis being one of the most serious complications. Recently, genetic background has emerged as an unanticipated risk factor. For this reason, polymorphisms for genes encoding archetypal receptors involved in the opsonic and nonopsonic clearance of microbes, pentraxin-3 (PTX3) and Dectin-1, respectively, were studied and correlated with the risk of infection. Fungal, bacterial, and viral infections were registered for a group of 198 patients with high-risk hematological malignancies. Polymorphisms for the pentraxin-3 gene (PTX3) showed a significant association with the risk of fungal infection by Candida spp. and, especially, by Aspergillus spp. This link remained even for patients undergoing antifungal prophylaxis, thus demonstrating the clinical relevance of PTX3 in the defense against fungi. CLEC7A polymorphisms did not show any definite correlation with the risk of invasive mycosis, nor did they influence the expression of Dectin-1 isoforms generated by alternative splicing. The PTX3 mRNA expression level was significantly lower in samples from healthy volunteers who showed these polymorphisms, although no differences were observed in the extents of induction elicited by bacterial lipopolysaccharide and heat-killed Candida albicans, thus suggesting that the expression of PTX3 at the start of infection may influence the clinical outcome. PTX3 mRNA expression can be a good biomarker to establish proper antifungal prophylaxis in immunodepressed patients.
Keyphrases
- candida albicans
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- patients undergoing
- newly diagnosed
- poor prognosis
- genome wide
- peritoneal dialysis
- chronic kidney disease
- biofilm formation
- prognostic factors
- gene expression
- risk factors
- patient reported outcomes
- inflammatory response
- binding protein
- cystic fibrosis
- cell wall
- bioinformatics analysis