Center for Microbial Pathogenesis, Abigail Wexner Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Medical Student Research Program, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Infect Immun. 2019 Sep 19;87(10). doi: 10.1128/IAI.00406-19. Print 2019 Oct.
Our studies reveal that the oral colonizer and cause of infective endocarditis subsp. displays a striking monolateral distribution of surface fibrils. Furthermore, our data suggest that these fibrils impact the structure of adherent bacterial chains. Mutagenesis studies indicate that these fibrils are dependent on three serine-rich repeat proteins (SRRPs), here named ibril-ssociated rotein (FapA), FapB, and FapC, and that each SRRP forms a different fibril with a distinct distribution. SRRPs are a family of bacterial adhesins that have diverse roles in adhesion and that can bind to different receptors through modular nonrepeat region domains. Amino acid sequence and predicted structural similarity searches using the nonrepeat regions suggested that FapA may contribute to interspecies interactions, that FapA and FapB may contribute to intraspecies interactions, and that FapC may contribute to sialic acid binding. We demonstrate that a mutant was significantly reduced in binding to saliva. We confirmed a role for FapC in sialic acid binding by demonstrating that the parental strain was significantly reduced in adhesion upon addition of a recombinantly expressed, sialic acid-specific, carbohydrate binding module, while the mutant was not reduced. However, mutation of a residue previously shown to be essential for sialic acid binding did not decrease bacterial adhesion, leaving the precise mechanism of FapC-mediated adhesion to sialic acid to be defined. We also demonstrate that the presence of any one of the SRRPs is sufficient for efficient biofilm formation. Similar structures were observed on all infective endocarditis isolates examined, suggesting that this distribution is a conserved feature of this subspecies.
我们的研究揭示了口腔定植菌和感染性心内膜炎亚种的病原体,其表面菌毛呈现出显著的单侧分布。此外,我们的数据表明这些菌毛影响了黏附菌链的结构。突变研究表明,这些菌毛依赖于三种富含丝氨酸的重复蛋白(SRRPs),分别命名为纤维蛋白相关蛋白(FapA)、FapB 和 FapC,并且每个 SRRP 都形成了不同的、具有独特分布的菌毛。SRRPs 是一类细菌黏附素,它们在黏附中具有多种作用,并且可以通过模块非重复区域域与不同的受体结合。使用非重复区域进行氨基酸序列和预测结构相似性搜索表明,FapA 可能有助于种间相互作用,FapA 和 FapB 可能有助于种内相互作用,而 FapC 可能有助于与唾液酸结合。我们证明了突变体在与唾液的结合能力上显著降低。我们通过证明添加重组表达的、特异性结合唾液酸的碳水化合物结合模块后,亲本株在黏附能力上显著降低,而突变体则没有降低,证实了 FapC 在唾液酸结合中的作用。然而,突变一个先前被证明对唾液酸结合至关重要的残基并没有降低细菌的黏附性,这使得 FapC 介导的与唾液酸结合的确切机制仍有待确定。我们还证明,任何一种 SRRPs 的存在都足以促进生物膜的形成。在所有检查的感染性心内膜炎分离株中都观察到了类似的结构,这表明这种分布是该亚种的一个保守特征。