| Literature DB >> 26413097 |
Cesar Henriquez-Camacho1, Palmira Ventosilla2, Michael F Minnick3, Joaquim Ruiz4, Ciro Maguiña2.
Abstract
Bartonella bacilliformis is the etiologic agent of Carrión's disease or Oroya fever. B. bacilliformis infection represents an interesting model of human host specificity. The notable differences in clinical presentations of Carrión's disease suggest complex adaptations by the bacterium to the human host, with the overall objectives of persistence, maintenance of a reservoir state for vectorial transmission, and immune evasion. These events include a multitude of biochemical and genetic mechanisms involving both bacterial and host proteins. This review focuses on proteins involved in interactions between B. bacilliformis and the human host. Some of them (e.g., flagellin, Brps, IalB, FtsZ, Hbp/Pap31, and other outer membrane proteins) are potential protein antigen candidates for a synthetic vaccine.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26413097 PMCID: PMC4568041 DOI: 10.1155/2015/702784
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pept ISSN: 1687-9767
Figure 1Various protein antigens of B. bacilliformis and their locations in the cell. Brp's: Bartonella repeat proteins, FtsZ: cell division protein, Hbp's: hemin-binding proteins, IalB: invasion-associated locus B protein, LppB: lipoprotein B, OM: outer membrane, PG: peptidoglycan, and CM: cytosolic membrane.
Figure 2Crystal structure of the invasion-associated locus B protein; 144 residues (77% of Bartonella bacilliformis IalB sequence) modeled with 100.0% confidence by the single highest scoring template. Program Phyre2 at http://www.sbg.bio.ic.ac.uk/phyre2/html/page.cgi?id=index. Model based on B. henselae IalB crystal template c3dtdi_.