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Infection and Immunity, December 2000, p. 6595-6601, Vol. 68, No. 12
Department of Molecular Biosciences,
University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045-2106
Received 26 June 2000/Returned for modification 16 August
2000/Accepted 5 September 2000
In vitro studies have shown that enterotoxigenic Escherichia
coli (ETEC) strains are capable of invading cultured epithelial cells derived from the human ileum and colon. Two separate invasion loci (tia and tib) have previously been
isolated from the classical ETEC strain H10407. The tia
locus has been shown to direct the synthesis of Tia, a 25-kDa outer
membrane protein. Tia is sufficient to confer the adherence and
invasion phenotypes on laboratory stains of E. coli,
suggesting that this protein is an adhesin and invasin. Here we report
the purification of Tia and characterize its biological activity. Tia
was purified by electroelution of outer membrane proteins that had been
separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Purified Tia was labeled with biotin and then shown to bind to HCT8
human ileocecal epithelial cells in a specific and saturable manner.
Polyclonal anti-Tia antiserum blocked this binding. These results show
that Tia acts as an adhesin. Polyclonal anti-Tia antiserum also
inhibited invasion of recombinant E. coli bearing tia clones, indirectly suggesting that Tia may also act as
an invasin. We predict Tia to contain eight transmembrane
amphipathic
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Epithelial Cell Adherence Mediated by the
Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli Tia Protein
-sheets with four loops that are exposed on the surface
of the bacterial cell. A peptide corresponding to 19 residues in one of
the four predicted surface-exposed loops inhibits Tia-mediated epithelial cell invasion. Seeding HCT8 cells on wells coated with purified Tia reduced Tia-mediated epithelial cell invasion. Together, these results indicate that Tia is an invasin and adhesin that binds a
specific receptor on HCT8 cells.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Biosciences, University of Kansas, 7049 Haworth Hall,
Lawrence, KS 66045-2106. Phone: (785) 864-4299. Fax: (785) 864-5294. E-mail: elsingh{at}ukans.edu.
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