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Paracoccidioides lutzii Infects Galleria mellonella Employing Formamidase as a Virulence Factor.

Elisa Dias PereiraThalison Rodrigues MoreiraVanessa Rafaela Milhomem Cruz-LeiteMariana Vieira TomazettLana O'Hara Souza SilvaDaniel GrazianiJuliana Assis MartinsAndré Corrêa AmaralSimone Schneider WeberJuliana Alves Parente-RochaCélia Maria de Almeida SoaresClayton Luiz Borges
Published in: PLoS neglected tropical diseases (2024)
The formamidase (FMD) enzyme plays an important role in fungal thriving by releasing a secondary nitrogen source as a product of its activity. In Paracoccidioides species, previous studies have demonstrated the upregulation of this enzyme in a wide range of starvation and infective-like conditions. However, Paracoccidioides lutzii formamidase has not yet been defined as a virulence factor. Here, by employing in vivo infections using an fmd-silenced strain in Galleria mellonella larvae model, we demonstrate the influence of formamidase in P. lutzii's immune stimulation and pathogenicity. The formamidase silencing resulted in improper arrangement of the nodules, poor melanogenesis and decreased fungal burden. Thus, we suggest that formamidase may be a piece composing the process of molecular recognition by Galleria immune cells. Furthermore, formamidase silencing doubled the observed survival rate of the larvae, demonstrating its importance in fungal virulence in vivo. Therefore, our findings indicate that formamidase contributes to Galleria's immune incitement and establishes the role of this enzyme as a P. lutzii virulence factor.
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