| Literature DB >> 33079206 |
Lidia Muscariello1, Barbara De Siena1, Rosangela Marasco2.
Abstract
The gut microbiota is a complex microbial ecosystem where bacteria, through mutual interactions, cooperate in maintaining of wellbeing and health. Lactobacilli are among the most important constituents of human and animal intestinal microbiota and include many probiotic strains. Their presence ensures protection from invasion of pathogens, as well as stimulation of the immune system and protection of the intestinal flora, often exerted through the ability to interact with mucus and extracellular matrix components. The main factors responsible for mediating adhesion of pathogens and commensals to the gut are cell surface proteins that recognize host targets, as mucus layer and extracellular matrix proteins. In the last years, several adhesins have been reported to be involved in lactobacilli-host interaction often miming the same mechanism used by pathogens.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33079206 PMCID: PMC7677277 DOI: 10.1007/s00284-020-02243-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Microbiol ISSN: 0343-8651 Impact factor: 2.188
Fig. 1Graphic representation of the most common in vitro model systems described to study bacteria/host interaction. a Detection of bacterial adhesion to mucus (Mu) or ECM components, e.g. fibronectin (Fn) and collagen (Cn). Binding assay can be performed on microtiter plate, coated with one ECM component or mucus (upper), or on diagnostic slides coated with matrigel (lower), which contains mostly Cn and laminin. Microbial cell culture of the strain under study is added in each well and, after washing, adhered cells can be detected and quantified by different methods: 1a—staining with crystal violet [61], qRT-PCR [77] or viable count [49], when microtiter plate is used; 2a—by light microscopy, when diagnostic slides are used [73]. b Identification of proteins involved in the bacteria/host interaction. Extracted surface proteins are separated by mono-dimensional (1D) or two-dimensional (2D) gel-electrophoresis and western blotted by using labeled ECM or mucus components [9] (1b), or specific polyclonal antibodies and labelled or conjugate secondary antibody [77] (2b). Identification of putative adhesins may be obtained by MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry (3b)
Adhesins in different species of Lactobacilli and their multiple functions
| Cell surface protein | Adesion targets/functions | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mucus binding proteins | |||
| MapA | • Mucus, collagen and Caco-2 cells | [ | |
| MUB | • Mucus, mucin and immunoglobulin • Involvement in bacterial auto-aggregation • Immunomodulatory activity | [ | |
| CmbA | • Mucus and Caco-2 cells • Immunomodulatory activity | [ | |
| 32-Mmubp | • Mucus and mucin • Component of an ABC transporter system | [ | |
| LAF_0673 | • Mucin • Protection from enteric phatogens invasion | [ | |
| MUB | • Mucus • Immunomodulatory activitiy | [ | |
| Msa | • Mannose residues present on the intestinal cells | [ | |
| lp_1643 | • Mucus adhesion • Inhibition of enterotoxigenic | [ | |
| Collagen/fibronectin binding proteins | |||
| Cnb | • Collagen | [ | |
| CbsA | • Collagen • Involvement in bacterial auto-aggregation • Immunomodulatory activity | [ | |
| SlpB | • Collagen | [ | |
| LCABL_01820 | • Collagen • Fibronectin | [ | |
| FbpA | • Fibronectin | [ | |
| Cbp | • Collagen • Inibition of | [ | |
| CBP | • Collagen • Inhibition of | [ | |
| FbpA | • Fibronectin and Caco-2 cell | [ | |
| FbpB | • Mucin and fibronectin | [ | |
| Moonlighting binding proteins | |||
| EF-Tu | • Mucin and Caco-2 cell • Immunomodulatory activity • Protein synthesis elongation factor | [ | |
| GroEL | • Mucin and intestinal epitelial cell • Immunomodulatory activity • Induction of • Molecular chaperone | [ | |
| EF-Tu | • Mucin • Protein synthesis elongation factor | [ | |
| Eno (enolase), GS (glutamine synthetase), GPI (glucose-6-phosphate isomerase) | • Collagen • Central Carbon metabolism enzymes | [ | |
| Eno, GAPDH (glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) | • Fibronectin • Glycolytic enzymes | [ | |
| EnoA1 (enolase A1) | • Fibronectin, collagen and Caco-2 adhesion • Immunomodulatory properties • Biofilm development • Glycolytic enzyme | [ | |
| PDHB (E1 beta-subunit of pyruvate dehydrogenase) | • Fibronectin, collagen • Biofilm development • Glycolytic enzyme | [ | |
| Elongation factor G | • Mucin • Elongation factor in protein synthesis | [ | |
| Pyruvate kinase | • Mucin • Glycolytic enzyme | ||
Adhesion mechanisms of some surface cell proteins to host targets
| Adhesin | Binding domain | Host target | References |
|---|---|---|---|
MUB (3269 aa) ( | Mub type 1 and type2 repeats | Terminal sialylated mucin glycans | [ |
LAF_0673 (1059 aa) | MBD93, 93 aa residues (890–982) at the C-terminal, with Ser57, Pro58, Ile60, Tyr63 and Ala65 residues likely involved in binding | Mucin glycans (N-acetylgalactosamine, N-acetylglucosamine, galactose, and sialic acid) | [ |
Lp_1643 (2219 aa) | Mubs5s6, 1198 aa fragment at the C-terminal, with two mucus binding domains | Mice intestinal mucus, pig gastric mucus, HT-29 and Caco-2 cell lines, and surface components of human enteric tissues (cytokeratins, Hsp90 and laminin) | [ |
SlpB (440 aa) | 379 aa residues (1–379) at the N-terminal | Type I and IV collagen | [ |
EnoA1 (442 aa) | 67 aa residues (73–140) at the N.terminal | Type I collagen | [ |