Iverson-Cabral Stefanie L, Wood Gwendolyn E, Totten Patricia A
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States of America.
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States of America; Department of Global Health, Pathobiology Interdisciplinary Program, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Sep 18;10(9):e0138244. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0138244. eCollection 2015.
Mycoplasma genitalium is a sexually transmitted pathogen and is associated with reproductive tract disease that can be chronic in nature despite the induction of a strong antibody response. Persistent infection exacerbates the likelihood of transmission, increases the risk of ascension to the upper tract, and suggests that M. genitalium may possess immune evasion mechanism(s). Antibodies from infected patients predominantly target the MgpB adhesin, which is encoded by a gene that recombines with homologous donor sequences, thereby generating sequence variation within and among strains. We have previously characterized mgpB heterogeneity over the course of persistent infection and have correlated the induction of variant-specific antibodies with the loss of that particular variant from the infected host. In the current study, we examined the membrane topology, antibody accessibility, distribution of amino acid diversity, and the location of functional and antigenic epitopes within the MgpB adhesin. Our results indicate that MgpB contains a single transmembrane domain, that the majority of the protein is surface exposed and antibody accessible, and that the attachment domain is located within the extracellular C-terminus. Not unexpectedly, amino acid diversity was concentrated within and around the three previously defined variable regions (B, EF, and G) of MgpB; while nonsynonymous mutations were twice as frequent as synonymous mutations in regions B and G, region EF had equal numbers of nonsynonymous and synonymous mutations. Interestingly, antibodies produced during persistent infection reacted predominantly with the conserved C-terminus and variable region B. In contrast, infection-induced antibodies reacted poorly with the N-terminus, variable regions EF and G, and intervening conserved regions despite the presence of predicted B cell epitopes. Overall, this study provides an important foundation to define how different segments of the MgpB adhesin contribute to functionality, variability, and immunogenicity during persistent M. genitalium infection.
生殖支原体是一种性传播病原体,与生殖道疾病相关,尽管会诱导强烈的抗体反应,但这种疾病可能是慢性的。持续感染会增加传播的可能性,增加病原体上行至生殖道上段的风险,并提示生殖支原体可能具有免疫逃避机制。感染患者产生的抗体主要靶向MgpB黏附素,该黏附素由一个与同源供体序列重组的基因编码,从而在菌株内部和菌株之间产生序列变异。我们之前已经对持续感染过程中的mgpB异质性进行了表征,并将变异特异性抗体的诱导与感染宿主中该特定变异的缺失相关联。在本研究中,我们研究了MgpB黏附素的膜拓扑结构、抗体可及性、氨基酸多样性分布以及功能和抗原表位的位置。我们的结果表明,MgpB含有一个单一的跨膜结构域,该蛋白的大部分位于表面且可被抗体识别,并且附着结构域位于细胞外C末端。不出所料,氨基酸多样性集中在MgpB先前定义的三个可变区域(B、EF和G)及其周围;虽然在区域B和G中非同义突变的频率是同义突变的两倍,但区域EF中的非同义突变和同义突变数量相等。有趣的是,持续感染期间产生的抗体主要与保守的C末端和可变区域B反应。相比之下,尽管存在预测的B细胞表位,但感染诱导的抗体与N末端、可变区域EF和G以及中间的保守区域反应较差。总体而言,本研究为确定MgpB黏附素的不同片段在生殖支原体持续感染期间如何影响功能、变异性和免疫原性提供了重要基础。