Litcius/Paper detail

Human Serum Albumin Facilitates Heme-Iron Utilization by Fungi

Mariel Pinsky, Udita Roy, Shilat Moshe, Ziva Weissman, Daniel Kornitzer

2020mBio39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Heme constitutes a major iron source for microorganisms and particularly for pathogenic microbes; to overcome the iron scarcity in the animal host, many pathogenic bacteria and fungi have developed systems to extract and take up heme from host proteins such as hemoglobin. Microbial heme uptake mechanisms are usually studied using growth media containing free heme or hemoglobin as a sole iron source. However, the animal host contains heme-scavenging proteins that could prevent this uptake. In the human host in particular, the most abundant serum heme-binding protein is albumin. Surprisingly, however, we found that in the case of fungi of the Candida species family, albumin promoted rather than prevented heme utilization. Albumin thus constitutes a human-specific factor that can affect heme-iron utilization and could serve as target for preventing heme-iron utilization by fungal pathogens. As a proof of principle, we identify two drugs that can inhibit albumin-stimulated heme utilization.

Topics & Concepts

HemeHuman albuminAlbuminChemistryBiochemistrySerum albuminMicrobiologyComputational biologyBiologyEnzymeIron Metabolism and DisordersPorphyrin Metabolism and DisordersHemoglobin structure and function
Human Serum Albumin Facilitates Heme-Iron Utilization by Fungi | Litcius