4.8 Article

The human pathobiont Malassezia furfur secreted protease Mfsap1 regulates cell dispersal and exacerbates skin inflammation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2212533119

Keywords

skin; fungi; protease; colonization; inflammation

Funding

  1. National Skin Centre
  2. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) BMRC EDB IAF-PP grant [H17/01/a0/004]
  3. Skin Research Institute of Singapore
  4. IAF-PP (HBMS) grant Asian Skin Microbiome Program IAF-PP grant [H18/01a0/016]
  5. MOE AcRF Tier 1 grant [R-143-000-B79-114, R-143-000-C16-114]
  6. Singapore Ministry of Health's National Medical Research Council OF-IRG [MOH-000612-00]
  7. Swiss National Science foundation [310030_189255]
  8. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [310030_189255] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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This study reveals differential expression of secretory enzymes in Malassezia globosa between healthy individuals and patients with seborrheic dermatitis or atopic dermatitis. Functional analysis of a homologous protease suggests its important role in altering cell adhesion and inflammation, highlighting the contextual relevance in evaluating the functions of secreted microbial enzymes.
Malassezia form the dominant eukaryotic microbial community on the human skin. The Malassezia genus possesses a repertoire of secretory hydrolytic enzymes involved in protein and lipid metabolism which alter the external cutaneous environment. The exact role of most Malassezia secreted enzymes, including those in interaction with the epithelial surface, is not well characterized. In this study, we compared the expression level of secreted proteases, lipases, phospholipases, and sphingomyelinases of Malassezia globosa in healthy subjects and seborrheic dermatitis or atopic dermatitis patients. We observed upregulated gene expression of the previously characterized secretory aspartyl protease MGSAP1 in both diseased groups, in lesional and non-lesional skin sites, as compared to healthy subjects. To explore the functional roles of MGSAP1 in skin disease, we generated a knockout mutant of the homologous protease MFSAP1 in the genetically tractable Malassezia furfur. We observed the loss of MFSAP1 resulted in dramatic changes in the cell adhesion and dispersal in both culture and a human 3D reconstituted epidermis model. In a murine model of Malassezia colonization, we further demonstrated Mfsap1 contributes to inflammation as observed by reduced edema and inflammatory cell infiltration with the knockout mutant versus wildtype. Taken together, we show that this dominant secretory Malassezia aspartyl protease has an important role in enabling a planktonic cellular state that can potentially aid in colonization and additionally as a virulence factor in barrier-compromised skin, further highlighting the importance of considering the contextual relevance when evaluating the functions of secreted microbial enzymes.

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