| Literature DB >> 29459694 |
Francisco Romero Pastrana1, Jolanda Neef1, Dennis G A M Koedijk1, Douwe de Graaf1, José Duipmans2, Marcel F Jonkman2, Susanne Engelmann3,4, Jan Maarten van Dijl5, Girbe Buist1.
Abstract
Human antibody responses to pathogens, like Staphylococcus aureus, are important indicators for in vivo expression and immunogenicity of particular bacterial components. Accordingly, comparing the antibody responses to S. aureus components may serve to predict their potential applicability as antigens for vaccination. The present study was aimed at assessing immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses elicited by non-covalently cell surface-bound proteins of S. aureus, which thus far received relatively little attention. To this end, we applied plasma samples from patients with the genetic blistering disease epidermolysis bullosa (EB) and healthy S. aureus carriers. Of note, wounds of EB patients are highly colonized with S. aureus and accordingly these patients are more seriously exposed to staphylococcal antigens than healthy individuals. Ten non-covalently cell surface-bound proteins of S. aureus, namely Atl, Eap, Efb, EMP, IsaA, LukG, LukH, SA0710, Sle1 and SsaA2, were selected by bioinformatics and biochemical approaches. These antigens were recombinantly expressed, purified and tested for specific IgG responses using human plasma. We show that high exposure of EB patients to S. aureus is mirrored by elevated IgG levels against all tested non-covalently cell wall-bound staphylococcal antigens. This implies that these S. aureus cell surface proteins are prime targets for the human immune system.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29459694 PMCID: PMC5818649 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-21724-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Strains and plasmids used in this study.
| Strain or plasmid | Relevant phenotype(s) or genotype(s) | Source or reference |
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| MG1363 |
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| (Novagen, Madison, Wis) | ||
| Propagating strain for typing phage 47 |
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| NCTC 8178 clinical isolate |
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| pRE-USPnlic |
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| pERL |
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| pNG4210 |
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| pNZ:LIC: | Fusion of pRE-USPnlic with pERL containing | This study |
| pNZ:LIC: | Fusion of pRE-USPnlic with pERL containing | This study |
| pNZ:LIC: | Fusion of pRE-USPnlic with pERL containing | This study |
| pNZ:LIC: | Fusion of pRE-USPnlic with pERL containing | This study |
| pNZ:LIC: | Fusion of pRE-USPnlic with pERL containing | This study |
| pNZ:LIC: | Fusion of pRE-USPnlic with pERL containing | This study |
| pNG4210: | pNG4210 containing | This study |
| pNG4210: | pNG4210 containing | This study |
| pNG4210: | pNG4210 containing | This study |
| pNG4210: | pNG4210 containing | This study |
| pNG4210: | pNG4210 containing |
[ |
Aa, amino acid residue; amp, ampicillin resistance gene; cam, chloramphenicol resistance gene; ery, erythromycin resistance gene; P, nisin-inducible promoter; usp45ss, signal sequence of usp45.
Figure 1Identification of non-covalently cell wall-bound S. aureus proteins. (A) Schematic representation of the experimental set-up for identification of non-covalently cell wall-bound proteins. S. aureus cells were first separated from the growth medium by centrifugation (spin). Pelleted S. aureus cells were treated with KSCN to release the non-covalently cell wall-bound proteins. KSCN-extracted proteins were re-bound to cell wall fragments (CWF) and, subsequently, released again by KSCN incubation. Upon centrifugation, the resulting pellet and supernatant fractions were analyzed by LDS-PAGE (B). Upon Simply Blue safe staining of the gel, protein bands were excised and identified by MS as indicated.
Primer sequences used in this study.
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Underlined are the LIC cloning sequences/restriction sites.
Identified non covalently cell surface-bound proteins.
| Uniprot ID | Gene names | AA |
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| A6QH29 | NWMN_1389 | 486 | Elastin-binding protein EbpS | |
| A0A0H3K686 | NWMN_0055 | 520 |
| Immunoglobulin G binding protein A |
| A0A0H3K6S5 | NWMN_0724 SA0710c | 279 |
| Uncharacterized protein |
| A0A0H3K7F5 | NWMN_0634 | 265 |
| Secretory antigen SsaA-like protein |
| A0A0H3KAZ4 | NWMN_0429 | 334 |
| N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase AAA |
| A0A0H3KG37 | NWMN_1157 | 383 |
| Cell-wall hydrolase LytN |
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| A0A0H3K7X7 | NWMN_0922 | 1256 |
| Bifunctional autolysin |
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| A0A0H3K875 | NWMN_1039 | 481 | Phage amidase [Bacteriophage phiNM2] | |
| A0A0H3K8J7 | NWMN_1534 | 291 |
| Probable cell wall amidase LytH |
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| A0A0H3KAI3 | NWMN_2392 | 1501 |
| Uncharacterized protein |
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| A0A0H3K7X7 | NWMN_0922 | 1256 |
| Bifunctional autolysin |
| A6QIG7 | NWMN_1877 | 149 |
| Chemotaxis inhibitory protein precursor |
| A0A0H3KA75 | NWMN_0166 | 636 |
| Coagulase |
| A6QF98 | NWMN_0758 | 340 |
| Extracellular matrix protein-binding protein emp precursor |
| A0A0H3KF27 | NWMN_2399 | 741 |
| Fibronectin binding protein A |
| A0A0H3K6R0 | NWMN_0687 | 646 |
| Lipoteichoic acid synthase |
| A6QK59 | NWMN_2469 | 233 |
| Probable transglycosylase IsaA precursor |
| A6QJQ7 | NWMN_2317 | 436 |
| Immunoglobulin-binding protein sbi precursor |
| A0A0H3KCA1 | NWMN_1066 | 109 |
| Uncharacterized protein Ehp |
| A0A0H3K6X4 | NWMN_0362 | 203 |
| Uncharacterized protein |
| A0A0H3KET4 | NWMN_0585 | 168 |
| Uncharacterized protein |
| A0A0H3K7N7 | NWMN_0757 | 508 |
| Secreted von Willebrand factor-binding protein |
| A0A0H3KEG7 | NWMN_2199 | 267 |
| Secretory antigen SsaA |
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| 1b A6QIG2 | NWMN_1872 | 584 |
| 65 kDa membrane protein precursor |
| A6QDC3 | NWMN_0083 | 392 | Phosphopentomutase | |
| 2 A6QG68 | NWMN_1078 | 333 | Ornithine carbamoyltransferase | |
| 3 A6QIG2 | NWMN_1872 | 584 |
| 65 kDa membrane protein precursor |
| 4 A6QJQ7 | NWMN_2317 | 436 |
| Immunoglobulin-binding protein Sbi precursor |
| 5 A0A0H3KHT5 | NWMN_1928 | 351 |
| Leukocidin/hemolysin toxin family S subunit |
| 6A6QF98 | NWMN_0758 | 340 |
| Extracellular matrix protein-binding protein Emp precursor |
| A0A0H3K9N1 | NWMN_1927 | 338 |
| Leukocidin/hemolysin toxin family F subunit |
| 7A0A0H3K5Z1 | NWMN_0249 | 296 |
| 5′-nucleotidase, lipoprotein e(P4) family protein |
| A0A0H3KIY0 | NWMN_2444 | 85 | Uncharacterized protein | |
| 8A6QG59 | NWMN_1069 | 165 |
| Fibrinogen-binding protein precursor |
aPROSITE ID of Motif; bExtracted band number from LDS-PAGE; cGene locus of NWMN_0724 homolog in S. aureus N315, used instead of gene name; dGene name of homologous protein if none was found in the Uniprot record; Se Secretion signal predicted by SignalP and/or according to Uniprot.
Figure 2Motif composition of non-covalently cell wall-bound proteins of S. aureus. The proteins shown are: the extracellular adherence protein Eap (SAOUHSC_02161); the bifunctional autolysin Atl (SAOUHSC_00994), of which the Atl1 (N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase) and Atl2 (Endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase) domains were separately expressed; the CHAP and LysM domain-containing protein SA0710 (SAOUHSC_00773); the N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase Sle1 (SAOUHSC_00427); the staphylococcal secretory antigen SsaA2 (SAOUHSC_02571); the gamma-hemolysin subunit B LukG (SAOUHSC_02241); the leukocidin LukH (SAOUHSC_02243); the probable transglycosylase IsaA (SA2356); the fibrinogen-binding protein Efb (SAOUHSC_01114); and the extracellular matrix protein-binding protein Emp (SAOUHSC_00816). Sig, signal peptide; MAP, MAP repeat profile (PROSITE: PS51223); amidase, N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase (Pfam: PF01510); glucosaminidase, endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase (Pfam: PF01832); GW, GW domain profile (PROSITE: PS51780); LysM, LysM domain profile (PROSITE:PS51782); CHAP, CHAP domain profile (PROSITE: PS50911); Leuk, Leukocidin/Hemolysin toxin family (Pfam: PF07968); NCD, N-terminal conserved domain; SLT, Transglycosylase SLT domain (Pfam: PF01464); Efb_c, extracellular fibrinogen binding protein C terminal (Pfam: PF12199); Fg, fibrinogen-binding motifs[63]. The green line represents amino acid residues selected for cloning and expression.
Figure 3Binding of purified non-covalently cell wall-bound proteins to S. aureus cells. Non-covalently cell wall-bound proteins were expressed in L. lactis and their binding to whole cells of S. aureus was assessed upon incubation at pH 7, or pH 5 in the case of Efb as indicated. Please note that the different groupings of blots (marked by boxes) were cropped per investigated protein from different parts of the same Western blot, or from different Western blots that were similarly processed and scanned. P, cell pellet fraction; S, supernatant fraction.
Figure 4Binding of human IgGs to purified non-covalently cell wall-bound S. aureus proteins. Levels of IgGs specific for purified cell wall-bound S. aureus proteins were compared by ELISA using plasma samples of patients with EB (red bullets) or healthy S. aureus carriers (blue bullets). (A) Normalized IgG titers in different plasma samples plotted per purified S. aureus antigen. (B) Normalized IgG titers in different plasma samples plotted per EB patient and healthy carrier. In brief, obtained EB and control averages were multiplied by a numeric factor that resulted in the average of all controls equal to 10 AU. After plotting normalized values, the differences in the average IgG levels measured for plasma samples from EB patients and healthy control individuals were compared for the different analyzed proteins (isolates/tests). Per patient, the number of S. aureus types identified per number of sampling time points are indicated in parentheses[19,24,26]. Sa, S. aureus.