Binding Properties and Adhesion-Mediating Regions of the Major Sheath Protein ofTreponema denticolaATCC 35405
Open Access
- 1 May 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 73 (5), 2891-2898
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.73.5.2891-2898.2005
Abstract
There is growing evidence that a number of oral Treponema species, in particular Treponema denticola, are associated with the progression of human periodontal disease. The major sheath (or surface) protein (Msp) of T. denticola is implicated in adhesion of bacteria to host cells and tissue proteins and is likely to be an important virulence factor. However, the binding regions of the Msp are not known. We have purified from Escherichia coli recombinant Msp (rMsp) polypeptides corresponding to the following: full-length Msp (rMsp) minus 13 N-terminal amino acid (aa) residues, an amino-terminal fragment (rN-Msp, 189 aa residues), a 57-aa residue segment from the central region (rV-Msp), and a C-terminal fragment (rC-Msp, 272 aa residues). rMsp (530 aa residues) bound to immobilized fibronectin, keratin, laminin, collagen type I, fibrinogen, hyaluronic acid, and heparin. The N- and V-region polypeptides, but not rC-Msp, also bound to these substrates. Binding of rMsp to fibronectin was targeted to the N-terminal heparin I/fibrin I domain. Antibodies to the N-region or V-region polypeptides, but not antibodies to the rC-Msp fragment, blocked adhesion of T. denticola ATCC 35405 cells to a range of host protein molecules. These results suggest that the N-terminal half of Msp carries epitopes that are surface exposed and that are involved in mediating adhesion. Binding of rMsp onto the cell surface of low-level fibronectin-binding Treponema isolates conferred a 10-fold increase in fibronectin binding. This confirms that Msp functions autonomously as an adhesin and raises the possibility that phenotypic complementation of virulence functions might occur within mixed populations of Treponema species.Keywords
This publication has 67 references indexed in Scilit:
- From tooth to hoof: treponemes in tissue-destructive diseasesJournal of Applied Microbiology, 2003
- Adhesion of oral spirochaetes to host cells and its cytopathogenic consequencesPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2002
- The opdB Locus Encodes the Trypsin-Like Peptidase Activity of Treponema denticolaInfection and Immunity, 2001
- Bacterial Diversity in Human Subgingival PlaqueJournal of Bacteriology, 2001
- A Spirochete Surface Protein Uncouples Store-operated Calcium Channels in FibroblastsPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- Non-heritable change of a spirochaete's phenotype by decoration of the cell surface with exogenous lipoproteinsMolecular Microbiology, 2001
- Membrane Components of Treponema denticola Trigger Proteinase Release from Human Polymorphonuclear LeukocytesJournal of Dental Research, 1996
- An extracellular enzyme with hyaluronidase and chondroitinase activities from some oral anaerobic spirochaetesMicrobiology, 1996
- The structural bases of integrin-ligand interactionsTrends in Cell Biology, 1994
- Treponema denficola as a model for polar adhesion and cytopathogenicity of spirochetesTrends in Microbiology, 1994