| Literature DB >> 27818662 |
Jennifer A Caine1, Jenifer Coburn1.
Abstract
Borrelia burgdorferi is the causative agent of Lyme disease in the U.S., with at least 25,000 cases reported to the CDC each year. B. burgdorferi is thought to enter and exit the bloodstream to achieve rapid dissemination to distal tissue sites during infection. Travel through the bloodstream requires evasion of immune surveillance and pathogen clearance in the host, a process at which B. burgdorferi is adept. B. burgdorferi encodes greater than 19 adhesive outer surface proteins many of which have been found to bind to host cells or components of the extracellular matrix. Several others bind to host complement regulatory factors, in vitro. Production of many of these adhesive proteins is tightly regulated by environmental cues, and some have been shown to aid in vascular interactions and tissue colonization, as well as survival in the blood, in vivo. Recent work has described multifaceted and redundant roles of B. burgdorferi outer surface proteins in complement component interactions and tissue targeted adhesion and colonization, distinct from their previously identified in vitro binding capabilities. Recent insights into the multifunctional roles of previously well-characterized outer surface proteins such as BBK32, DbpA, CspA, and OspC have changed the way we think about the surface proteome of these organisms during the tick-mammal life cycle. With the combination of new and old in vivo models and in vitro techniques, the field has identified distinct ligand binding domains on BBK32 and DbpA that afford tissue colonization or blood survival to B. burgdorferi. In this review, we describe the multifunctional and redundant roles of many adhesive outer surface proteins of B. burgdorferi in tissue adhesion, colonization, and bloodstream survival that, together, promote the survival of Borrelia spp. throughout maintenance in their multi-host lifestyle.Entities:
Keywords: Borrelia; Lyme disease; adhesion; colonization; complement; pathogenicity; virulence
Year: 2016 PMID: 27818662 PMCID: PMC5073149 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00442
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Outer surface protein regulation. B. burgdorferi senses changes in temperature, pH, and cell density, as well as unknown stimuli to modulate production of proteins on the bacterial surface. Proteins listed are upregulated in their respective environments, in the tick vector or the mammalian host, or are produced at similar levels in both environments. Proteins produced during mammalian infection are grouped based on temporal expression pattern, expressed early during infection (early), during persistent infection (late), or those that have been detected both early and late during infection or have not been experimentally determined (both/untested). aBased on in vivo qRT-PCR and microarray data (15). (#)Reference. Underline indicates genes regulated by the RpoS regulon.
Adhesive outer surface proteins of .
| Adhesin | Genetic locus | Reference | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lmp1 | Chondroitin-6-sulfate | ( | Not determined | ( | |
| BmpA | Laminin | ( | Joint persistence | ( | |
| BmpC | Not determined | Not determined | ( | ||
| Bgp | Heparin, dermatan sulfate, GAGs, and aggrecan | ( | Not determined | ( | |
| P66 | Integrins αIIbβ3 and αvβ3 | ( | Heart and skin adhesion, dissemination, and vascular transmigration (integrin-binding domain) | ( | |
| DbpA | Decorin, GAGs | ( | Joint colonization | ( | |
| DbpB | Decorin, GAGs | ( | Joint colonization | ( | |
| BBA33 | Collagen | ( | Not determined | ( | |
| BBB07 | Integrin α3β1 | ( | Not determined | ( | |
| OspC | Plasminogen, Salp15 (in tick saliva) | ( | Bloodstream survival | ( | |
| RevB | Fibronectin | ( | Not determined | ( | |
| VlsE | Not determined | Not determined | ( | ||
| BBK32 | Fibronectin, GAGs, and complement component C1r | ( | Vascular adhesion and joint colonization (GAG-binding domain) | ( | |
| RevA | Fibronectin, laminin | ( | Heart colonization | ( | |
| ErpA (CRASP-5) | Factor H, Factor H-related proteins 1, 2, and 5, and plasminogen | ( | Not determined | ( | |
| OspA | TROSPA (in tick) | ( | N/A | ( | |
| CspZ (CRASP-2) | Factor H, Factor H-like 1 | ( | N/A | ( | |
| CspA (CRASP-1) | Factor H, Factor H-like 1, and complement components C7 and C9 | ( | Not determined | ||
| BBA70 | Plasminogen | ( | Not determined | ||
| ErpC (CRASP-4) | Factor H, Factor H-related protein 1, and plasminogen | ( | Not determined | ||
| ErpK | Heparan sulfate | ( | Not determined | ||
| ErpP (CRASP-3) | Factor H, Factor H-related proteins 1, 2, and 5, and plasminogen | ( | Not determined | ||
| ErpL | Heparan sulfate | ( | Not determined | ||
| ErpX | Laminin | ( | Not determined | ||
| OspF | Heparan sulfate | ( | Not determined | ||
| ErpG (OspG) | Heparan sulfate, heparin | ( | Not determined | ||
N/A, not applicable.
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