4.4 Article

Anaplasma marginale Outer Membrane Protein A Is an Adhesin That Recognizes Sialylated and Fucosylated Glycans and Functionally Depends on an Essential Binding Domain

期刊

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
卷 85, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00968-16

关键词

Anaplasma; Ehrlichia; Lewis antigen; Lewis x; adhesin; bacterial invasion; intracellular bacteria; obligate intracellular bacteria; rickettsia; tick-borne pathogens

资金

  1. NIH [R01 AI072683]
  2. Stephen and Alexandra Cohen Foundation
  3. NIH-NCI Cancer Center [P30 CA016059]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15K08288] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Anaplasma marginale causes bovine anaplasmosis, a debilitating and potentially fatal tick-borne infection of cattle. Because A. marginale is an obligate intracellular organism, its adhesins that mediate entry into host cells are essential for survival. Here, we demonstrate that A. marginale outer membrane protein A (AmOmpA; AM854) contributes to the invasion of mammalian and tick host cells. AmOmpA exhibits predicted structural homology to OmpA of A. phagocytophilum (ApOmpA), an adhesin that uses key lysine and glycine residues to interact with alpha 2,3-sialylated and alpha 1,3-fucosylated glycan receptors, including 6-sulfo-sialyl Lewis x (6-sulfo-sLe(x)). Antisera against AmOmpA or its predicted binding domain inhibits A. marginale infection of host cells. Residues G55 and K58 are contributory, and K59 is essential for recombinant AmOmpA to bind to host cells. Enzymatic removal of alpha 2,3-sialic acid and alpha 1,3-fucose residues from host cell surfaces makes them less supportive of AmOmpA binding. AmOmpA is both an adhesin and an invasin, as coating inert beads with it confers adhesiveness and invasiveness. Recombinant forms of AmOmpA and ApOmpA competitively antagonize A. marginale infection of host cells, but a monoclonal antibody against 6-sulfo-sLe(x) fails to inhibit AmOmpA adhesion and A. marginale infection. Thus, the two OmpA proteins bind related but structurally distinct receptors. This study provides a detailed understanding of AmOmpA function, identifies its essential residues that can be targeted by blocking antibody to reduce infection, and determines that it binds to one or more alpha 2,3-sialylated and alpha 1,3-fucosylated glycan receptors that are unique from those targeted by ApOmpA.

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