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A sialoreceptor binding motif in the Mycoplasma synoviae adhesin VlhA.
- Source :
-
PloS one [PLoS One] 2014 Oct 22; Vol. 9 (10), pp. e110360. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Oct 22 (Print Publication: 2014). - Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Mycoplasma synoviae depends on its adhesin VlhA to mediate cytadherence to sialylated host cell receptors. Allelic variants of VlhA arise through recombination between an assemblage of promoterless vlhA pseudogenes and a single transcription promoter site, creating lineages of M. synoviae that each express a different vlhA allele. The predicted full-length VlhA sequences adjacent to the promoter of nine lineages of M. synoviae varying in avidity of cytadherence were aligned with that of the reference strain MS53 and with a 60-a.a. hemagglutinating VlhA C-terminal fragment from a Tunisian lineage of strain WVU1853(T). Seven different sequence variants of an imperfectly conserved, single-copy, 12-a.a. candidate cytadherence motif were evident amid the flanking variable residues of the 11 total sequences examined. The motif was predicted to adopt a short hairpin structure in a low-complexity region near the C-terminus of VlhA. Biotinylated synthetic oligopeptides representing four selected variants of the 12-a.a. motif, with the whole synthesized 60-a.a. fragment as a positive control, differed (P<0.01) in the extent they bound to chicken erythrocyte membranes. All bound to a greater extent (P<0.01) than scrambled or irrelevant VlhA domain negative control peptides did. Experimentally introduced branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) substitutions Val3Ile and Leu7Ile did not significantly alter binding, whereas fold-destabilizing substitutions Thr4Gly and Ala9Gly tended to reduce it (P<0.05). Binding was also reduced to background levels (P<0.01) when the peptides were exposed to desialylated membranes, or were pre-saturated with free sialic acid before exposure to untreated membranes. From this evidence we conclude that the motif P-X-(BCAA)-X-F-X-(BCAA)-X-A-K-X-G binds sialic acid and likely mediates VlhA-dependent M. synoviae attachment to host cells. This conserved mechanism retains the potential for fine-scale rheostasis in binding avidity, which could be a general characteristic of pathogens that depend on analogous systems of antigenically variable adhesins. The motif may be useful to identify previously unrecognized adhesins.
- Subjects :
- Alleles
Amino Acid Motifs
Animals
Bacterial Adhesion
Bacterial Proteins genetics
Bacterial Proteins metabolism
Biotinylation
Chickens
Erythrocytes drug effects
Erythrocytes metabolism
Erythrocytes microbiology
Gene Expression
Hemagglutinins genetics
Hemagglutinins metabolism
Lectins genetics
Lectins metabolism
Models, Molecular
Molecular Sequence Data
Mycoplasma synoviae drug effects
Mycoplasma synoviae genetics
Mycoplasma synoviae metabolism
Oligopeptides chemistry
Oligopeptides metabolism
Protein Binding
Protein Folding
Protein Structure, Secondary
Pseudogenes
Receptors, Cell Surface metabolism
Sialic Acids pharmacology
Sialoglycoproteins metabolism
Bacterial Proteins chemistry
Erythrocytes chemistry
Hemagglutinins chemistry
Lectins chemistry
Mycoplasma synoviae chemistry
Receptors, Cell Surface chemistry
Sialoglycoproteins chemistry
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1932-6203
- Volume :
- 9
- Issue :
- 10
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- PloS one
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 25338071
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110360