Galleria mellonella serves as an invertebrate model for disseminated candidiasis. Here, we detail the infection protocol and provide supporting data for the model's effectiveness.
Candida species are common fungal commensals of humans colonizing the skin, mucosal surfaces, and gastrointestinal tract. Under certain conditions, Candida can overgrow their natural niches resulting in debilitating mucosal infections as well as life-threatening systemic infections, which are a major focus of investigation due to their associated high mortality rates. Animal models of disseminated infection exist for studying disease progression and dissecting the characteristics of Candida pathogenicity. Of these, the Galleria mellonella waxworm infection model provides a cost-effective experimental tool for high-throughput investigations of systemic virulence. Many other bacterial and eukaryotic infectious agents have been effectively studied in G. mellonella to understand pathogenicity, making it a widely accepted model system. Yet, variation in the method used to infect G. mellonella can alter phenotypic outcomes and complicate interpretation of the results. Here, we outline the benefits and drawbacks of the waxworm model to study systemic Candida pathogenesis and detail an approach to improve reproducibility. Our results highlight the range of mortality kinetics in G. mellonella and describe the variables which can modulate these kinetics. Ultimately, this method stands as an ethical, rapid, and cost-effective approach to study virulence in a model of disseminated candidiasis.
Candida species are common human commensals that are capable of emerging as opportunistic pathogens in severely immunocompromised and dysbiotic patients. Although many Candida species can cause disease, C. albicans is the most prevalent cause of disseminated candidiasis1,2. Systemic disease results from C. albicans accessing the bloodstream through either direct penetration of previously restrictive host barriers or introduction at surgical sites and other breaches of the body3. Candida species utilize a range of pathogenic processes to cause systemic disease within the host including filamentation, biofilm formation, immune cell evasion and escape, and iron scavenging4. In vitro approaches exist to investigate individual pathogenic mechanisms, but animal models continue to provide the best option to investigate the entirety of disease outcome5,6. Previous research has detailed many instances of promising in vitro investigations of virulence failing to reproduce in vivo7,8. Thus, animal models are still required to assess virulence in vivo. Most disease models rely on mice to serve as a surrogate for human infections despite C. albicans inability to naturally colonize murine systems as a commensal9. Invertebrate models of disseminated candidiasis include the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, and the waxworm Galleria mellonella, although concerns about fundamental differences in basic physiology, host body temperatures, and routes of exposure have hampered their broad acceptance10,11.
Most recently, the G. mellonella waxworm infection model has been adopted to model pathogenicity of a wide range of bacterial and fungal pathogens12,13,14. Advantages of this model include its relatively low cost, increased throughput, ease of use, and reduced ethical concerns regarding animal beneficence compared to murine models. For researchers, this translates into increased ability to test multiple variables, stronger confidence intervals, more rapid experimentation, and bypass of animal protocols. G. mellonella has served as a platform to rapidly assess C. albicans virulence following perturbation of genes required for biofilm formation, filamentation, and gene regulation across clinical isolates11,15,16. Recent studies have incorporated investigation of antifungal efficacy using G. mellonella to assess the pharmacokinetics of drug activity and resistance under in vivo settings, which are otherwise challenging and time consuming17,18. Yet, studies of C. albicans virulence in G. mellonella have been complicated by reportedly high levels of variation within experiments and inconsistent protocols between research groups that produce differing virulence phenotypes between mice and waxworms11,13,19,20,21. Here, we outline a G. mellonella protocol to standardize C. albicans infections, increase reproducibility in virulence experiments, and demonstrate consistency with previously described studies of virulence in murine models.
Previous studies demonstrated that the C. albicans mating type-like (MTL) locus on chromosome 5 regulates cell identity and mating competence similar to Saccharomyces cerevisiae and other Ascomycete fungi22. The majority of C. albicans isolates are heterozygous at the MTL locus, encoding one of each of the MTLa and MTLα alleles (MTLa/α), and are consequently sterile15,23,24. Loss of one of the MTL alleles through loss of heterozygosity (LOH) or mutation leads to homozygous MTLa or MTLα strains that can undergo a phenotypic switch from the sterile 'white' state to the mating competent 'opaque' state25. Previous work has highlighted that loss of MTL heterozygosity also reduces virulence in murine models of systemic infection across different strain backgrounds26. Here, we detail the G. mellonella model for disseminated candidiasis using a genetically similar experimental set to depict the contribution of MTL heterozygosity to virulence in G. mellonella. We show that MTL configuration influenced C. albicans pathogenicity, where MTLα strains were less virulent with respect to both MTLa/α and MTLa cells, similar to findings within murine infection model26.
All methods described rely on use of invertebrate hosts and do not require Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) approval.
1. Galleria mellonella Waxworm Larvae
2. Culture Preparation for Galleria mellonella Infection
NOTE: Proper lab attire should be worn throughout this portion of the protocol including gloves, lab coat, and safety glasses.
3. Infection of Galleria mellonella Larvae with Candida Cultures
NOTE: Proper lab attire should be worn throughout this portion of the protocol including gloves, lab coat, and safety glasses.
Here, we demonstrate a reproducible method for the use of G. mellonella waxworms to investigate a disseminated candidiasis model of infection using C. albicans. The appropriate storage, maintenance, and selection of larvae for infection are critical component of insuring reproducibility in G. mellonella mortality (Figure 1A). Healthy larvae that are active, have a light yellow/tan color, and lack black patches on the body should be used for this system and are typically viable for infection up to two weeks following arrival. To minimize any potentially confounding effects of G. mellonella physiology, larvae were selected of similar size and weight. A well-mixed inoculum and consistent injection at the same anatomical site of the larvae body also stand as important variables in promoting reproducibility between experiments. Images showcase maintenance of infected larvae through the duration of experimentation (Figure 1B).
To assess the impact of larvae age on virulence, separate PBS control infections were performed with larvae either zero or ten days after arriving. No significant difference in the kinetics of G. mellonella death existed between these groups (Figure 2A). Characteristic signs of illness arose in larvae from both groups that succumbed to the infection; the originally yellow/tan coloration of the larvae became discolored and gave way to black patches before total loss of motility and, eventually, death (Figure 2B). Infection with C. albicans speeds up this process of discoloration and morbidity but does not significantly alter the cascade of phenotypic markers leading to death compared to uninfected larvae or PBS injected larvae (Figure 2C).
The infective dose also significantly impacts mortality kinetics of G. mellonella infections. To assess the effects of C. albicans inoculum size, we infected G. mellonella with four different clinical isolates (12C, P60002, P75010, and SC5314: Table 1) at three different doses. Larvae infected with SC5314 displayed mortality at all doses, consistent with increased pathogenicity of this isolate relative to most others used within the experiment (Figure 2D). More larvae succumbed to infection with 1.0 x 105 SC5314 or 12C cells compared to 1.0 x 104 cells. The highest dose of 1.0 x 106 cells proved excessively lethal with larvae dying following infection of all strains including the less virulent isolates, P60002 and 12C. Larvae injected with P75010 and SC5314 succumbed to the infection within 24 h, suggesting a more moderate infectious dose is appropriate to determine differences in virulence. Consequently, an infectious dose of 2.5×105 was used for all subsequent experiments.
To demonstrate similarity in virulence between murine and G. mellonella models of systemic disease, we assayed virulence of SC5314-derived C. albicans strains encoding either heterozygous (a/α or homozygous (a/-or α/-) MTL loci. Infection of G. mellonella with MTL heterozygotes from either the SC5314 or its prototrophic derivative BWP17 genetic background produced high rates of mortality compared to PBS-injected animals. Three-quarters of the control larvae survived to day 8 compared to loss of over half of all C. albicans injected animals within 3 days post infection (dpi) that further increased at 8 dpi (Figure 3A, 3B). Infection with BWP17 dampened C. albicans lethality in this model (27% survival compared to 4% survival in SC5314 MTL heterozygotes at 8 dpi; Figure 3C, 3D). G. mellonella larvae infected with MTLα/- strains survived significantly longer compared to the MTL heterozygous parental strains (log-rank test, SC5314; p=0.0006, BWP17; p=0.0002). Interestingly, virulence of MTLa/- C. albicans cells matched its MTL heterozygous counterpart in both the SC5314 and BWP17 backgrounds. Thus, MTL configuration does have an influence on C. albicans virulence with MTLα/- strains displaying decreased killing compared to either MTLa/α or MTLa/- cells.
Figure 1. Overview of infection procedure. (A) A flowchart highlights the key elements of the infection procedure including ordering and storage of larvae, infection culture preparation, and injection. (B) Representative images show healthy storage conditions, preparation of the infection space, injection, and larvae maintenance following infection. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. The effects of G. mellonella infection procedures. (A) PBS controls were infected either immediately upon arrival (PBS-D0, blue) or after 10 days (PBS-D10, red). (B) Representative images highlight larvae discoloration and death. (C) An image series of infection plates detail the effects of injection with PBS (middle) or with SC5314 (lower) compared to uninfected larvae (top) on days 1, 3, 5, and 7 following injection. (D) Dosage effects are shown within a collection of clinical isolates. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. The MTLa allele promotes C. albicans killing of G. mellonella. MTL locus heterozygous (a/α) and homozygous (a/- and α/-) SC5314 (A) and BWP17 (C) derivatives are plotted for larvae mortality over eight days. Confidence intervals are plotted for each SC5314 (B) and BWP17 (D) derivative strain to highlight consistency in the kinetics of larvae mortality across experiments. The average (solid line) is plotted with standard deviations (filled in space) for three biological replicates of 10 larvae each. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Candida strain | Parental strain | Genotype | MTL | Reference |
MAY1 | SC5314 | Candida albicans clinical isolate | a/α | Wu et al. 2007 |
MAY6 | P60002 | Candida albicans clinical isolate | a/a | Wu et al. 2007 |
MAY11 | P75010 | Candida albicans clinical isolate | a/α | Wu et al. 2007 |
MAY15 | 12C | Candida albicans clinical isolate | a/a | Wu et al. 2007 |
MAY61 | SC5314 | MTLa::SAT1 | α/- | This study |
MAY71 | SC5314 | MTLα::SAT1S tac1::TAC1-GFP-HYGR | a/- | This study |
MAY313 | BWP17 | ura3Δ::λimm434/ura3Δ::λimm434 his1::hisG/his1::hisG arg4::hisG/arg4::RS-arg4-ura3-BN sir2::his1/sir2::dpl200 | a/α | This study |
MAY314 | BWP17 | ura3Δ::λimm434/ura3Δ::λimm434 his1::hisG/his1::hisG arg4::hisG/arg4::RS-ARG4-URA3-BN sir2::HIS1/sir2::dpl200 | α/- | This study |
MAY315 | BWP17 | ura3Δ::λimm434/ura3Δ::λimm434 his1::hisG/his1::hisG arg4::hisG/arg4::RS-ARG4-URA3-BN sir2::HIS1/sir2::dpl200 | a/- | This study |
Table 1. C. albicans strains used in this study.
Variable component | Suggested control | Reference |
Larvae age at time of injection | Minimize time between worm arrival and inoculation | This study |
Larvae size at time of injection | Ensure consistency when selecting worms | Fuchs et al. 2010 |
Larvae health at time of injection | Order worms during moderate temperature, use immediately upon arrival | This study |
Infectious dose with C. albicans | Select an infectious concentration which presents widest range of outcomes | This study |
Larvae response to injection | Conduct PBS injection controls alongside worms with no injection | Hirakawa et al. 2015 |
Table 2. Considerations regarding G. mellonella infection.
The G. mellonella waxworm model stands as an effective tool for the rapid and reproducible analysis of C. albicans virulence. This detailed protocol relies upon consistent delivery of a defined infectious dose to the same site across a batch of larvae. Infectious dose has a profound impact on G. mellonella mortality whereas use of larvae between their initial arrival and ten days following receipt produced similar results. Loss of the C. albicansMTLa allele results in decreased virulence consistent with previous experiments in mice although disruption of the MTLα allele did not alter larvae death.
The outcome of G. mellonella infections can be significantly impacted by the experimental design. In contrast to vertebrate models of infection, small variation in the injection site, inoculum volume, and inoculum size may impact interpretations of the data. Infections with increasing numbers of C. albicans cells led to greater and more rapid morbidity of infected larvae. At a certain point, injecting too many C. albicans appears capable of overwhelming host defenses leading to rapid death of the host, potentially through toxic shock. However, SC5314 was consistently the most virulent strain at all doses, followed by 12C, and then the other strains. Thus, infection parameters have a profound impact on the absolute kinetics of infections but may still provide estimates of relative virulence. Prior work within these experiments further demonstrated the importance of thoroughly washing the Candida cells. Residual YPD included in the injection bolus significantly decreases larvae survival (data not shown).
Worm health is a critical variable when conducting G. mellonella experiments. Larvae transported using standard shipping in the middle of summer often arrive prematurely aged or stressed, covered with black patches, with decreased viability. No significant role for larvae size on morbidity has been previously observed although the experiments described here focused on assaying larvae of roughly equivalent mass. Healthy larvae and PBS control larvae should always be run alongside infection groups to account for any changes in larvae viability between biological replicates performed on separate days. G. mellonella infected ten days after arriving matched the kinetics of larvae infected immediately upon receipt. Thus, a single shipment of larvae can provide sufficient material and time to perform full experiments. These experiments relied upon 30 animals per strain to determine differences in virulence, which is significantly more animals than typically utilized in murine models, resulting in stronger confidence of observed results11,27,28. This model also reduced ethical concerns, time, and costs compared to vertebrate models of infection. Thus, the use of wax larvae may facilitate identification of smaller effects on systemic virulence than is possible in other systems.
Inherent caveats to the G. mellonella system exist that limit its utility in studying host-pathogen interactions. First, G. mellonella lack an adaptive immune system and cannot be used to investigate antigenicity or immunological memory as in higher eukaryotes29. The body of the larvae is composed of a single continuous cavity filled with hemolymph, which function to circulate nutrients, signaling molecules, immune cells, and antimicrobial peptides. These immune cells, hemocytes, behave similarly to neutrophils and can therefore phagocytose, generate oxidative bursts, and secrete lytic enzymes following activation through extracellular pathogen recognition receptors30. Yet, this function is a subset of innate immune cell processes within chordate systems that may not fully reflect all leukocyte activities. Another major caveat is the lack of a genome assembly for G. mellonella although the genome was recently sequenced31. Consequently, the extent of genotypic diversity within the species is unknown and most suppliers likely ship genetically heterogeneous populations that may affect mortality across experiments. Furthermore, molecular techniques do not exist for the organism and complicate any attempts to dissect host contributions to pathogenesis. Yet, consistent virulence results following infection with C. albicans across experiments, vendors, time, and labs supports their utility in fundamental questions of pathogenicity.
Loss of MTLa reduced virulence of C. albicans relative to MTL heterozygotes and MTLα homozygote backgrounds. This trend is consistent with prior work performed using mouse models of systemic virulence26. In contrast to murine models, loss of MTLα did not alter virulence relative to the MTLa/α parental strain. The discrepancy between these results is unclear but may include components of adaptive immunity that are missing in invertebrate organisms. Alternatively, increased virulence associated with MTL heterozygosity may be attributable only to the MTLα allele in SC5314, potentiating the need for assessment across multiple strain backgrounds. Therefore, we suggest a differential role for virulence between the two MTL alleles.
Overall, the G. mellonella model serves as a rapid and reproducible model for assessing systemic candidiasis. Other readouts of virulence can be assayed with this model including fungal prevalence by plating larvae homogenate for colony forming units (CFUs)11 or bioluminescence, which also provides fungal localization32. In the future, this model can be expanded to assess virulence characteristics of other Candida species such as elevated drug resistance in the newly emergent Candida auris species33. Continued development of tools to visualize lymphocyte within G. mellonella interacting with infecting Candida, inbred waxworm lineages to reduce variability in infections outcomes, and visualization of the infective process via reporter Candida lines34 will further refine this model of disease and allow deeper investigations of in vivo host-pathogen interactions.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors would like to acknowledge the assistance of Pamela Washington and Leah Anderson in obtaining Galleria mellonella for use in this study.
Galleria mellonella | Snackworms.com | Buy twice as many worms as expected to use | |
10 uL, Model 1701 N SYR Cemented needle, 26G, type 2 syringe | Hamilton | 80000 | |
Petri dish, 100X15 mm, 500 pack | Fisher | FB0875712 | |
Microcentrifuge tube, 1.7 mL, 500 pack | VWR | 87003-294 | |
Phosphate Buffered Saline (Biotechnology grade), 500 mL | VWR | 97062-818 | |
Ethanol absolute, ≥99.5% pure, 500 mL | Millipore Sigma | EM-EX0276-1S | |
autoclaved ddH2O |