Literature DB >> 30323030

The Pneumococcal Surface Proteins PspA and PspC Sequester Host C4-Binding Protein To Inactivate Complement C4b on the Bacterial Surface.

Kashif S Haleem1,2, Youssif M Ali1,3, Hasan Yesilkaya1, Thomas Kohler4, Sven Hammerschmidt4, Peter W Andrew1, Wilhelm J Schwaeble1, Nicholas J Lynch5.   

Abstract

Complement is a critical component of antimicrobial immunity. Various complement regulatory proteins prevent host cells from being attacked. Many pathogens have acquired the ability to sequester complement regulators from host plasma to evade complement attack. We describe here how Streptococcus pneumoniae adopts a strategy to prevent the formation of the C3 convertase C4bC2a by the rapid conversion of surface bound C4b and iC4b into C4dg, which remains bound to the bacterial surface but no longer forms a convertase complex. Noncapsular virulence factors on the pneumococcus are thought to facilitate this process by sequestering C4b-binding protein (C4BP) from host plasma. When S. pneumoniae D39 was opsonized with human serum, the larger C4 activation products C4b and iC4b were undetectable, but the bacteria were liberally decorated with C4dg and C4BP. With targeted deletions of either PspA or PspC, C4BP deposition was markedly reduced, and there was a corresponding reduction in C4dg and an increase in the deposition of C4b and iC4b. The effect was greatest when PspA and PspC were both knocked out. Infection experiments in mice indicated that the deletion of PspA and/or PspC resulted in the loss of bacterial pathogenicity. Recombinant PspA and PspC both bound serum C4BP, and both led to increased C4b and reduced C4dg deposition on S. pneumoniae D39. We conclude that PspA and PspC help the pneumococcus to evade complement attack by binding C4BP and so inactivating C4b.
Copyright © 2018 American Society for Microbiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  C4b-binding protein; Streptococcus pneumoniaezzm321990; complement; pneumococcal surface protein

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30323030      PMCID: PMC6300637          DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00742-18

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Immun        ISSN: 0019-9567            Impact factor:   3.441


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