posted on 2020-05-28, 13:04authored byWenqian Li, Haomin Wang, Xiaoji G. Xu, Yan Yu
Particles
extracted from yeast cell walls are naturally occurring
immunomodulators with significant therapeutic applications. Their
biological function has been thought to be a consequence of the overall
chemical composition. In contrast, here we achieve direct nanoscale
visualization of the compositional and structural heterogeneity of
yeast cell wall particles and demonstrate that such nanoscale heterogeneity
directly influences the receptor function of immune cells. By combining
peak force infrared (PFIR) microscopy with super-resolution fluorescence
microscopy, we achieve simultaneous chemical, topographical, and mechanical
mapping of cell wall particles extracted from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae with ≈6 nm resolution.
We show that polysaccharides (β-glucan and chitin) and proteins
are organized in specific nonuniform structures, and their heterogeneous
spatial organization leads to heterogeneous recruitment of receptors
on immune cell membranes. Our findings indicate that the biological
function of yeast cell wall particles depends on not only their overall
composition but also the nanoscale distribution of the different cell
wall components.