Infection and Immunity, December 1998, p. 5939-5947, Vol. 66, No. 12
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
2
8)-Linked Polysialic Acid Capsule and
Lipooligosaccharide Structure Both Contribute to the Ability of
Serogroup B Neisseria meningitidis To Resist the
Bactericidal Activity of Normal Human Serum
Departments of Medicine1 and Microbiology and Immunology,2 Emory University School of Medicine, and VA Medical Center,4 Atlanta, Georgia 30033, and the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 306023
Received 28 July 1998/Returned for modification 28 August 1998/Accepted 23 September 1998
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ABSTRACT |
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The molecular basis for the resistance of serogroup B
Neisseria meningitidis to the bactericidal activity of
normal human sera (NHS) was examined with a NHS-resistant, invasive
serogroup B meningococcal isolate and genetically and structurally
defined capsule-, lipooligosaccharide (LOS)-, and sialylation-altered mutants of the wild-type strain. Expression of the (
2
8)-linked polysialic acid serogroup B capsule was essential for meningococcal resistance to NHS. The very NHS-sensitive phenotype of acapsular mutants (99.9 to 100% killed in 10, 25, and 50% NHS) was not rescued by complete LOS sialylation or changes in LOS structure. However, expression of the capsule was necessary but not sufficient for a fully
NHS-resistant phenotype. In an encapsulated background, loss of LOS
sialylation by interrupting the
2,3 sialyltransferase gene,
lst, increased sensitivity to 50% NHS. In contrast,
replacement of the lacto-N-neotetraose
-chain
(Gal
1-4GlcNAc
1-3Gal
1-4Glc) with glucose extensions
(GlcN) in a galE mutant resulted in a strain
resistant to killing by 50% NHS at all time points. Encapsulated meningococci expressing a
Hep2(GlcNAc)
KDO2
lipid A LOS without an
-chain demonstrated enhanced sensitivity to 50% NHS (98%
killed at 30 min) mediated through the antibody-dependent classical
complement pathway. Encapsulated LOS mutants expressing truncated
Hep2
KDO2
lipid A and
KDO2
lipid A structures were also sensitive to 50%
NHS (98 to 100% killed at 30 min) but, unlike the wild-type strain and mutants with larger oligosaccharide structures, they were killed by
hypogammaglobulinemic sera. These data indicate that encapsulation is
essential but that the LOS structure contributes to the ability of
serogroup B N. meningitidis to resist the
bactericidal activity of NHS.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Serogroup B Neisseria meningitidis (the meningococcus) is an obligate human pathogen and remains a leading cause of fulminant septicemia and meningitis. In addition to sporadic outbreaks, large epidemics of serogroup B meningococcal disease continue to occur in many parts of the world, including South America, the United States Pacific Northwest, Western Europe, and New Zealand (4, 22). After penetrating upper respiratory tract mucosal surfaces, N. meningitidis must survive and multiply in the bloodstream to cause sepsis, meningitis, and other manifestations of invasive meningococcal disease. A major mechanism inhibiting or preventing the multiplication of meningococci in the blood is the complement-mediated bactericidal activity of human sera (17, 39). The importance of this activity in the prevention of systemic meningococcal disease is reinforced by host factors that alter bactericidal activity and increase the risk for development of invasive disease. These factors include the absence of bactericidal antibodies against meningococci (17, 18, 45), deficiencies in the complement cascade (13), and the presence of blocking immunoglobulin A antibodies that inhibit the bactericidal activity of human sera (19). The bactericidal activity of human sera against meningococci is also used as a surrogate marker for assessing meningococcal vaccine efficacy.
Meningococci have evolved mechanisms that protect them from the
bactericidal activity of human sera. Invasive serogroup B meningococcal
strains recovered from blood and cerebrospinal fluid often resist being
killed by human sera (48). The molecular basis for
resistance has been attributed to the expression by this organism of an
(
2
8)-linked polysialic acid capsule and a short-chained
lipooligosaccharide (LOS) with terminal sialic acid residues (23,
34, 35). Meningococci isolated from the bloodstream in invasive
disease, in contrast to nasopharyngeal isolates, are heavily
encapsulated (9) and express the L3,7,9 LOS immunotypes
(28). These immunotypes have a
lacto-N-neotetraose originating from HepI of the inner core,
which may be terminally sialylated (34, 62). However, the
experimental data defining the precise contributions of the capsule,
LOS sialylation, and LOS structure to the ability of serogroup B
meningococci to resist the bactericidal activity of human sera is
conflicting (11, 15, 20, 21, 27, 37, 63-65).
LOS epitopes are immunogenic in infants and children and induce protective bactericidal antibodies in convalescent sera (10, 12). These bactericidal LOS antibodies appear to be directed at conserved low-molecular-weight LOS epitopes (10, 12). LOS is also a component of new serogroup B outer membrane vesicle (OMV) vaccines and is proposed as a basis for other new meningococcal vaccines (1-3, 50). Although changes in the structure of LOS are known to influence the amount and epitopes of bactericidal and other functional antibodies elicited by OMV vaccines (2), the precise LOS structure(s) to include in these and other LOS-containing meningococcal vaccines is uncertain.
To help understand the basis for meningococcal survival following mucosal invasion and to facilitate development of meningococcal vaccines which may contain LOS, we created a series of genetically and structurally defined capsule-, sialylation-, and LOS-altered mutants of the serogroup B meningococcal strain NMB. We used these mutants to study the contributions of the capsule, LOS sialylation, and changes in LOS structure to meningococcal resistance to the bactericidal activity of normal human sera (NHS).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strains and media. The serogroup B meningococcal strain NMB and a series of genetically and structurally defined mutants of this strain were used. These mutants were defective in capsule formation, LOS sialylation, or altered in LOS structure or had a combination of these phenotypes. The characteristics of strain NMB are summarized in Table 1, and the creation and selection of the mutants have been described previously (29, 30, 32, 56, 57, 60, 69) or are described below. The serum-resistant gonococcal strain FA19 was also used (55). The strains were grown on gonococcal (GC) agar (Difco) with supplements according to the recommendations of Morse and Bartenstein (38). The following antibiotics were used where appropriate: 5 µg of tetracycline/ml and 60 µg of spectinomycin/ml. Mutants containing the aphA::3 cassette were grown on brain heart infusion agar supplemented with 2.5% fetal bovine serum and containing 80 µg of kanamycin/ml.
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Construction of synA::
mutants.
An
internal section of synA (siaA) (57,
59) was amplified by PCR with the primers JS51
(5'-GCAATACCATTACGTTTATCTCTC-3') and JS40
(5'-GTTTCAGGATTGTTGATTACTTCAGC-3'). The TA cloning kit (Invitrogen) was used to clone this PCR product into the
polylinker of the plasmid pCR2 to form pCK3. A MscI
partial digest of pCK3 was ligated with a SmaI-digested
pHP45 (41) and transformed into Escherichia coli
JM109. Transformants were selected for resistance to kanamycin and
spectinomycin. Restriction mapping of the recombinant plasmids
confirmed the insertion of the spectinomycin cassette (
) into the
internal site of the cloned synA fragment in plasmid pCK4.
The synA::
cassette was cloned from pCK4 into
the vector pHSG298 to form pCK5.
was
confirmed by PCR of the chromosomal synA locus.
Construction of lst::
mutant.
A
unique HincII site was introduced into an internal region of
the LOS sialyltransferase gene, lst (16), using
PCR. The primer pairs lst4Hc (5'-GAAGGTAAAGTCGAGCTGCTGC-3')
with cycl (5'-GCAAATCCTGCCACGACAGTTTCC-3') and lst5Hc (5'-CAGCAGCGTCGACTTTACCTTCAGC-3')
with icdl (5'-CAAAAGCCTGCACAATCGGCAGC-3') were used to amplify the 3' and 5' ends of the lst
gene. Equimolar amounts of these two PCR products were used as a
template in a standard PCR with the nested primer pair lst2
(5'-GAATGCGGTTTCCCTGCTGAAGG-3') and lst3
(5'-CAGCGGCAGGTAAGTCATCTTGC-3'). The resultant PCR
product, which represents an internal region of lst
containing a unique HincII site, was cloned into the
polylinker HincII site of the low-copy-number vector
pHSG576 to create pCK90. The polar spectinomycin cassette,
, was
released from pHP45 (41) by using SmaI and ligated with HincII-digested pCK90. A combination of
recipient vector and cassette antibiotic resistances was used to select transformants harboring the correct recombinant plasmid. The resultant plasmid was called pCK91. The lst::
cassette
was released from pCK91 with EcoRI and PstI and
cloned into corresponding sites in the high-copy-number vector pHSG298
to form pCK92. The wild-type parent, NMB, was transformed with pCK92 by
the plate transformation method (60), and transformants were
identified by their acquisition of spectinomycin resistance. The site
of insertion of lst::
was confirmed by PCR of
the chromosomal lst locus with the icd1 and cyc1
primer pair.
Construction of FA19 LOS mutants. Piliated FA19 was transformed with chromosomal DNA from the meningococcal LOS mutants R6 and 469. Transformants were selected for acquisition of the tetracycline marker, and the LOS profiles of these isolates were further characterized by Tricine sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (29). Those transformants which were tetracycline resistant and expressed truncated LOS structures characteristic of the corresponding meningococcal mutants were used.
Assessment of outer membrane structures.
The outer membrane
structures of meningococcal strain NMB and of each mutant were
extensively studied. Piliation of the wild-type parent was assessed by
electron microscopy of negatively stained preparations and by
monoclonal antibody reactivity (54) and, in the case of the
mutants, by competence for transformation. Outer membrane proteins
(OMP) were assessed by serotyping and subtyping (44) (kindly
performed by George Carlone, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention) and by Coomassie-stained Laemmli SDS-PAGE of isolated outer
membranes (5). LOS immunotyping was performed as previously
described (44). Structural analysis of LOS expressed by
strain NMB and the mutants was performed by Tricine SDS-PAGE,
compositional studies, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and mass
spectrometry (29, 30, 32, 42). Immunoblots and whole-cell
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (57, 59, 60) were used to
quantitate amounts of (
2
8)-linked polysialic acid capsule.
Phospholipid analysis of strain NMB and its mutants was performed by
mass spectrometry and NMR (51).
SBA.
A microdilution serum bactericidal assay (SBA) was
performed (55), modified as described below. Briefly, blood
from five healthy adult subjects without a history of gonococcal or
meningococcal disease and not under antibiotic therapy was collected
under sterile conditions, allowed to clot for 3 min at room temperature
(23°C), and then centrifuged at 500 × g at 4°C for
15 min. The serum was removed, pooled, divided into subsamples, and
stored at
70°C until used in the experiments. Total hemolytic
activity in the serum (measured by the 50% hemolytic complement value
[the amount of complement required to lyse 50% of sensitized sheep
erythrocytes]) was at normal levels. Isolates to be tested were grown
on GC agar plates for 14 to 16 h at 37°C in 3% (vol/vol)
CO2. The colonies were inoculated into 10 ml of GC broth
containing supplements and grown to an optical density of 0.5 at 550 nm. The inocula were diluted in 1× minimal essential medium (MEM;
Gibco) containing 50 mM HEPES, pH 7.3 (HEPES-MEM) to the desired
concentration (105 cells/ml) and used immediately in the
SBA. In some experiments heat-inactivated sera (56°C for 30 min),
hypogammaglobulinemic serum from a patient with acquired common
variable immunodeficiency, or C2-deficient human serum (Calbiochem, La
Jolla, Calif., and Quidel, San Diego, Calif.) were used.
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RESULTS |
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Outer membrane composition of meningococcal strain NMB
and mutants.
The wild-type parent strain, NMB, is an
encapsulated B:2b;P1.2,5:L3,7,9 (serogroup:serotype [class II or III
OMP];serosubtype [class I OMP]:LOS immunotype) originally
isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid of a patient with meningococcal
meningitis in Pennsylvania in 1982. Strain NMB was competent and
expressed class II pili, which can be glycosylated (Gal
1-4-Gal)
(62a), and zero to two class V (Opa) proteins.
Wild-type parent strain NMB [encapsulated;
NANA
2
3Gal
1
4GlcNAc
1
3Gal
1
4Glc
1
4Hep2(GlcNAc, Glc)PEA
KDO2
lipid
A LOS].
The predominant structure of the LOS of strain NMB, based
on biochemical and physical studies, is shown in Fig.
1A. The LOS species contains a terminal
lacto-N-neotetraose
(Gal
1
4GlcNAc
1
3Gal
1
4Glc)
-chain
attached to the Hep2-KDO2-lipid A inner core.
By routine immunotyping, NMB is an L3. However, physical studies
indicate that strain NMB expresses both L3 and L2 LOS, with L2 as the
predominant LOS structure (42). Both L2 and L3
structures have identical
-chains of
lacto-N-neotetraose attached to HepI of the inner core. They differ primarily by the attachment of glucose to the 0-3 of
HepII in L2 versus attachment of a phosphoethanolamine (PEA) group at
the same position in L3. Antibodies that readily distinguish the 0-3 HepII region are not usually employed in standard immunologic typing
techniques. Therefore, L2 and L3 structures appear the same in standard
immunotyping.
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2,3 sialyltransferase (68). The
cytidine monophosphate (CMP)-NANA substrate for this reaction (and also for capsule polymerization) is endogenously synthesized by serogroup B N. meningitidis (57).
Under laboratory growth conditions, the
-chain of strain NMB was
20 to 50% sialylated (NANA
2
3) at the
-chain terminal galactose (42), resulting in two
major LOS structures of different mobilities (4.5 and 4.8 kDa) when
separated by Tricine SDS-PAGE (Fig. 2A and
B).
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NHS) did not kill strain NMB at any time
point. Increasing the sialylation of the LOS of strain NMB to 100% by growth in CMP-NANA did not change the survival of NMB in 50% NHS (data
not shown). In C2-deficient and hypogammaglobulinemic sera, strain NMB
was completely resistant after 30 min of incubation.
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SynA mutation [nonencapsulated;
Gal
1
4GlcNAc
1
3Gal
1
4Glc
4Hep2(GlcNAc,Glc)PEA
KDO2
lipid A LOS].
A mutant of strain NMB designated M7 contains a single truncated
Tn916 inserted in synA, the first gene of
the capsule biosynthesis operon (synABCD) of serogroup
B N. meningitidis (57,
60). SynA is responsible for conversion of
N-acetyl-D-glucosamine-6-phosphate to
N-acetyl-D-mannosamine-6-phosphate
in the CMP-NANA biosynthesis pathway. Insertional activation of any of
the CMP-NANA biosynthetic genes, synA, -B, or
-C, prevents endogenous LOS sialylation as well as
encapsulation. The SynA mutant is completely defective in both sialic
acid biosynthesis (Fig. 2B) and capsule expression (57). The
predominant LOS of the SynA mutant (Fig. 1B) was otherwise identical to
the lacto-N-neotetraose-containing L2 structure of the
parent, except that the LOS was not sialylated (Fig. 2)
and phosphorylation of the lipid A was increased (42).
5) (Fig. 3). Thus, in an
unencapsulated background the bactericidal activity of NHS was not
inhibited by expression of an unsialylated, lacto-N-neotetraose-containing LOS.
The rapid bactericidal activity of NHS against the SynA
mutant was mediated through the antibody-dependent, classical
complement pathway. Fifty percent
NHS did not kill the SynA mutant
at any time point. The rapid bactericidal activity observed in 10% NHS was probably below a critical concentration for
alternative-pathway-mediated complement activation (7, 61),
and no killing of the SynA mutant was observed with 10% C2-deficient
sera. In 50% hypogammaglobulinemic sera, minimal killing was observed
over 30 min (3.92 log10 [83%] survival [Table 1]). In
50% C2-deficient sera, ~1 log unit of killing was observed over 30 min (Table 1). Restoration of C2-deficient sera with exogenous C2
restored rapid and complete killing (0% survival at 5 min). These data
indicate that bactericidal antibodies in NHS, recognizing exposed outer
membrane structures in an unencapsulated background, produce rapid and
complete killing of the SynA mutant. The data predict that
unencapsulated, nonsialylated meningococci which
reach the bloodstream would be rapidly killed.
SynD mutation [nonencapsulated;
NANA
2
3Gal
1
4GlcNAc
1
3Gal
1
4Glc
1
4Hep2(GlcNAc,Glc)PEA
KDO2
lipid
A LOS].
The SynD mutant, designated mutant 43, is defective in
capsule expression due to a Tn916 insertion in the fourth
gene, synD, of the serogroup B capsule biosynthesis operon
(57, 58). Inactivation of synD, which encodes the
serogroup B capsule
2
8 polysialyltransferase for capsule
formation from CMP-NANA, results in an unencapsulated phenotype while
retaining LOS sialylation. In contrast to the 20- to
50%-sialylated parent, the SynD mutant, under standard laboratory growth conditions, produced an almost completely
sialylated LOS (Fig. 2B), presumably because the block
in capsule production shunts CMP-NANA into the LOS sialylation pathway.
2
8)-linked polysialic acid capsule of group B
meningococci for conferring resistance to the bactericidal activity of NHS.
Lst mutation [encapsulated;
Gal
1
4GlcNAc
1
3Gal
1
4Glc
1
4Hep2(GlcNAc,Glc)PEA
KDO2
lipid A LOS].
We
next asked whether LOS structure influenced serum bactericidal
activity in an encapsulated meningococcal background. A mutation
in the
2,3 sialyltransferase gene, lst, was
created, resulting in the inability to add NANA to the 0-3 lacto-N-neotetraose galactosyl residue (Fig. 1B and 2B). The
lst mutant was resistant to 10 and 25% NHS at all time
points (Fig. 3A and B). In 50% NHS, the lst mutant was more
sensitive than the parent at 15 min (P = 0.0192) and at
30 min (P = 0.00125) (Fig. 3C and Table 1).
GalE mutation [encapsulated;
GlcN-Hep2(GlcNAc,Glc)PEA
KDO2
lipid
A LOS].
A galE mutant, designated SS3, was fully
encapsulated but produced a truncated LOS which migrated at 3.4 kDa
(Fig. 2A). The mutation was due to a Tn916 insertion in the
amino terminus of the functional copy of the UDP-Glc4-epimerase,
galE (32). UDP-Glc 4-epimerase activity was
present in N. meningitidis NMB but not in SS3, indicating that the Tn916 insertion had abolished
this activity. Structural analysis of LOS from mutant SS3 revealed that
there was no galactose present in the structure (Fig. 1C), but multiple
terminal glucoses were present. The original galE transformant expressed one class V (Opa) protein rather than the two
expressed by the wild-type parent. However, class V expression was not
linked to the galE mutation, and only galE
mutants which matched the class V expression profile of the parent were
used in the bactericidal assays.
NHS at all serum concentrations and at all time points (Fig. 3 and Table 1). The galE mutant was more resistant than the
wild-type parent in 50% NHS (P < 0.02 at 15 min and
P < 0.0005 at 30 min). Thus, an encapsulated mutant
lacking lacto-N-neotetraose and LOS sialylation, but
expressing a GlcN
HepI
-chain, demonstrated enhanced resistance to NHS.
Pgm mutation [encapsulated;
Hep2(GlcNAc)PEA
KDO2
lipid A
LOS].
The LOS mutant designated R6 produced a truncated LOS
molecule of 3.1 to 3.2 kDa (Fig. 2) and was shown to contain a
Tn916 inserted in the 3' end of pgm, the gene
encoding the meningococcal and gonococcal phosphoglucomutase
(69). The inability of mutant R6 to convert
glucose-6-phosphate to glucose-1-phosphate, which is required for
UDP-glucose and UDP-galactose synthesis, resulted in the
truncated LOS phenotype expressed by this mutant. Analysis of R6 LOS by
mass spectrometry (69) showed that the predominant LOS
structure was
Hep2(GlcNAc)PEA
KDO2
lipid A (Fig.
1D).
LgtF mutation (CMK2) [encapsulated;
Hep2(GlcNAc)
PEA
KDO2
lipid A
LOS].
LgtF is the
1-4 glucosyl transferase initiating
synthesis of the
-chain from HepI and is found in the
inner core extension (ice1) operon with rfaK, the
1,2 N-acetylglucosamine transferase (see below)
(30). When lgtF was inactivated by a nonpolar
cassette, the LOS
-chain was missing but the inner core
GlcNAc attached to HepII was present. No glucose was present in
the LgtF mutant LOS structure. Although produced by distinct mutations,
the predominant LOS structures expressed by the LgtF and Pgm mutants
were identical (Fig. 1D).
KDO2
lipid A,
created by inactivation of two different genes (pgm and
lgtF), demonstrated identical profiles of increased
sensitivity to NHS.
RfaK mutation (encapsulated;
Hep2PEA
KDO2
lipid A LOS).
Mutant CMK1 is created by an
insertion in the
1,2
N-acetylglucosamine transferase gene, rfaK,
encoding the enzyme responsible for the addition of
N-acetylglucosamine to HepII (29). The CMK1 mutant expressed a truncated LOS of 3.0 kDa (Fig. 2A), that is, a
Hep2PEA
KDO2
lipid A structure
(Fig. 1E). The mutant was totally deficient in the addition of GlcNAc
to the inner core LOS and also completely lacked an
-chain on
HepI. The lack of an
-chain extension from HepI in mutant CMK1
is likely due to structural constraints imposed by the incomplete
biosynthesis of the LOS inner core (29).
OrfA mutation (encapsulated; KDO2
lipid A
LOS).
The LOS mutant designated 469 exhibited a markedly truncated
LOS structure of 2.9 kDa (Fig. 2A). The mutant contained a single truncated Tn916 insertion located in a second LOS inner core
extension operon, ice2. Inactivation of the gene
orfA in the ice2 operon was responsible for the
truncated LOS phenotype. Glycosyl composition and linkage analysis of
the mutant OrfA LOS showed that it consisted of
KDO2
lipid A (52) (Fig. 1F).
NHS and C2-deficient sera did not kill the OrfA mutant. However, as with the RfaK mutant, hypogammaglobulinemic serum completely killed the OrfA mutant (e.g., 0% survival at 30 min).
Effect of combined LOS and capsule mutations.
The plasmid
pCK5, containing the synA::
cassette, was used
to transform the pgm, galE, rfaK, and
orfA mutants. The lack of capsule expression of the
transformants was confirmed by colony immunoblotting. Each of the
acapsular, LOS-truncated mutants was rapidly and completely killed at 5 min by 10% NHS (data not shown). This profile was not significantly
different from the killing of the synA or synD
mutants that expressed the LOS
-chain composed of
sialylated or nonsialylated
lacto-N-neotetraose.
Effects of LOS mutations in a Neisseria gonorrhoeae background. To assess whether the influence of LOS structure on meningococcal sensitivity to NHS was dependent on an encapsulated meningococcal background, we transformed the pgm and 469 (orfA) mutations into the serum-resistant gonococcal strain FA19. Compared to the serum-resistant parent, the pgm mutation enhanced serum sensitivity (90% killing) in the gonococcal background (Fig. 4), similar to that observed in the meningococcal background. However, the orfA mutation resulted in a very NHS-sensitive gonococcal phenotype that was completely killed in 10% NHS at 5 min (Fig. 4) compared to the same mutation in meningococci (Fig. 3). Thus, examination of LOS mutations in the appropriate meningococcal or gonococcal background was important for the assessment of the contributions of LOS to killing by NHS.
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DISCUSSION |
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The wild-type meningococcal strain used in this study resembled
other invasive serogroup B meningococcal strains (11, 65) in that it was encapsulated, expressed a
sialylated lacto-N-neotetraose LOS,
and resisted the bactericidal activity of up to 50% NHS. The
(
2
8)-linked polysialic acid capsule was the major
determinant that allowed this strain to resist the bactericidal
activity of NHS. The serogroup B capsule is poorly immunogenic
due to its identity with host cell molecules, such as the neural cell
adhesion molecule, N-CAM (14). Through steric or
electrostatic hindrance, the polysialic acid capsule may decrease the
binding of antibodies directed toward other meningococcal surface
structures. In addition, sialic acid capsules have been shown to
redirect overall C3 deposition on the bacterial surface (24, 27,
65), to increase the quantity of amide-linked C3 (25),
and, although not clearly shown for sialic acid polymers, perhaps to
render surface-bound C3 more accessible to the action of factors H and
I with subsequent blocking of factor B binding and enhanced
inactivation of C3b to iC3b (36, 40). Vogel et al.
(65) recently showed that deposition of C3b and its
derivatives (e.g., iC3b) on encapsulated group B meningococci was
initially dependent on the classical pathway and that the location of
C3b differed in the encapsulated parent versus unencapsulated mutants.
Unencapsulated variants of our serogroup B meningococcal strain, regardless of LOS structure, were rapidly killed by NHS. In addition, expression of a fully sialylated lacto-N-neotetraose through endogenous or exogenous CMP-NANA did not protect the unencapsulated phenotype. These data are consistent with those of Klein et al. (31), who found that the blood-sensitive phenotype of acapsular N. meningitidis could not be rescued by the presence of sialylated LOS, and with those of Fox et al. (15), who were unable to increase serum resistance by growing meningococci in the presence of exogenous CMP-NANA. In N. gonorrhoeae, however, exogenous sialylation of LOS inhibits complement-mediated killing by serum (8, 43, 53, 67). These data emphasize the critical role of the meningococcal serogroup B polysialic acid capsule in inhibiting the bactericidal activity of NHS and the differences in the mechanisms of resistance of meningococci and gonococci to NHS.
Capsule expression, while necessary, was not sufficient to confer a
fully NHS-resistant phenotype on group B meningococci. In an
encapsulated background, expression of LOS
-chain structures from HepI was needed for high-level resistance to NHS. These
-chain structures included, but did not require, a
sialylated lacto-N-neotetraose. Moran et al.
(37) showed that meningococci expressing the
sialylatable lacto-N-neotetraose of the L3 LOS immunotype
were more resistant to the bactericidal activity of serum than
meningococci expressing the nonsialylatable
Gal
1
4Glc
1
4HepI of the L8 immunotype. Vogel et al.
(64, 65) and Hammerschmidt et al. (21)
initially reported that sialylation of LOS and encapsulation were both
indispensible for serogroup B meningococcal resistance to
complement-mediated killing by NHS and for bacteremia in the infant rat
model. However, these conclusions were based on the increased serum
sensitivity of a LOS-truncated galE mutant. As shown, our
galE mutant was completely resistant at all concentrations
of NHS and was even more resistant than the wild-type parent. Our
mutant contains GlcN extensions from Hep
(32) in contrast to the truncated
-chain containing
one or two glucose moieties present on other meningococcal galE mutants (66). Interestingly, Robertson et
al. (47) reported that galE mutants of the
gonococcal strain MS11 also exhibit increased resistance to NHS
compared to the sialylated,
lacto-N-neotetraose-expressing parent. Recently, Estabrook
et al. (11) reported that bactericidal activity of NHS
against serogroup C meningococcal strains correlated with the amount of
free lacto-N-neotetraose exposed, not with LOS sialylation
per se. While antibodies in NHS directed at
lacto-N-neotetraose could explain these observations, this
molecule is poorly immunogenic, since the
lacto-N-neotetraose structure is common to the human Ii
antigens (33) and NHS does not contain significant
amounts of antibodies directed against lacto-N-neotetraose
(11). Estabrook et al. (11) suggest that
bactericidal activity may be due to binding of C3 to the terminal
galactose of unsialylated
lacto-N-neotetraose on LOS. In contrast, Vogel et al.
(63) recently reported that a serogroup B encapsulated
lst (
2,3 sialyltransferase) mutant, which was unable to
terminally sialylate LOS, was as resistant to NHS as the wild-type
parent, despite enhanced C3b binding. In our studies in a serogroup B
encapsulated background, loss of sialylation enhanced susceptibility to
NHS. This may be due to the increased exposure of terminal galactose of
the
-chain lacto-N-neotetraose or loss of the effect
of LOS sialylation in blocking complement pathway activation
(43). Certainly, the length and nature of meningococcal LOS
-chain extending beyond Glc
1
4HepI was an important
determinant for facilitating meningococcal resistance to NHS.
In an encapsulated background, loss of the
-chain and
exposure of inner core LOS structures
[Hep2(GlcNAc)
KDO2
lipid A
or Hep2
KDO2
lipid A] enhanced
meningococcal susceptibility to killing by NHS. Though the kinetics and
mechanisms of killing were different, truncation of LOS to
Hep2 inner core structures made these encapsulated mutants
as sensitive to NHS as the capsule-deficient mutants (i.e., up to 100%
killing). For the
Hep2(GlcNAc)
KDO2
lipid A
mutants, killing was largely mediated by an
antibody-initiated classical complement pathway, since killing
was not observed in hypogammaglobulinemic sera.
Bactericidal antibodies to conserved inner core LOS
structures are found in sera of meningococcal carriers, in convalescent
sera of patients following meningococcal disease, and in NHS (10, 12). The NHS used in this study contained antibodies which
recognized the minimal LOS structure,
Hep2(GlcNAc)
KDO2
lipid A (data not shown). Enhanced immunoglobulin M antibody binding to the
truncated galE mutant described by Vogel et al.
(65) was seen.
Alternatively, truncated LOS structures may alter the topology of the
outer membrane (including sialic acid capsule polymers) and enhance
exposure of other outer membrane components. This may enhance
susceptibility to complement-mediated killing by NHS through
direct activation of C1q (6, 26), activation of
the alternative complement pathway, enhanced binding of bactericidal antibodies to outer membrane structures other than LOS, or allowing the
binding of blocking antibodies. The rapid killing of
Hep2
KDO2
lipid A and
KDO2
lipid A mutants in hypogammaglobulinemic sera
but not C2-deficient sera suggests that these strains are not killed by bactericidal antibody or the alternative complement pathway but may
directly activate C1q. Surprisingly, despite their
marked sensitivity to hypogammaglobulinemic sera, the
Hep2
KDO2
lipid A and
KDO2
lipid A mutants were partially resistant to NHS,
suggesting that extensive truncation of meningococcal LOS may expose
epitopes (e.g., class IV proteins) recognized by nonbactericidal or
blocking antibodies. Exposure of certain inner core LOS structures in a gonococcal background resulted in serum killing profiles
different from those seen in the corresponding meningococcal mutants.
Although the expression of
Hep2(GlcNAc)PEA
KDO2
lipid A
in gonococci also produced a serum-sensitive phenotype similar to
that in meningococci, the deep rough mutant, FA19/469, in contrast to
the meningococcal 469 mutant, was extremely sensitive to serum. These
findings reinforce the concept that truncation of LOS structures in
gonococcal and meningococcal strains may have different effects on the
topology of the outer membrane.
In addition to heterogeneity in oligosaccharide structure, meningococcal LOS displays heterogeneity in the phosphorylation substitution of lipid A. We have previously noted that the lipid A of meningococcal LOS from a capsule-defective mutant is more heavily substituted with phosphate than lipid A of the parent (42). However, the biological role of this modification of lipid A in capsule-defective and truncated LOS mutants remains unclear. We found no correlation of meningococcal lipid A phosphorylation with sensitivity to NHS. However, monophosphoryl enteric lipid A is less bioactive than diphosphoryl lipid A, as shown by the rabbit pyrogenicity test, the chicken embryo lethal dose test, and the Schwartzmann reaction, as well as by a reduced ability to stimulate monokine induction in murine macrophage cell lines (46). Indeed, a brief study of the ability of meningococcal and gonococcal LOS to clot Limulus amebocyte lysate revealed that this activity was strain dependent and possibly related to the amount of phosphorylated lipid A expressed by each isolate (49). The biological importance of phosphorylation of meningococcal lipid A remains to be elucidated.
Defining the role of the capsule, LOS sialylation, and LOS structure in
serum killing of meningococci has implications for the development of
new serogroup B meningococcal vaccines containing OMVs or LOS. Since
the (
2
8)-linked serogroup B capsule and the LOS
lacto-N-neotetraose and digalactose structures of the
-chain molecule are weakly immunogenic, the use of truncated LOS
molecules with
Hep2(GlcNAc)
KDO2
lipid A
structures in OMV vaccines may boost LOS antibodies produced by these
vaccines. Andersen et al. have recently shown that this may
be true by using a
Glc
Hep2(GlcNAc)
KDO2
lipid A truncated LOS in an OMV vaccine given to mice (2).
OMV vaccines containing
Hep2(GlcNAc)
KDO2
lipid A in
addition to higher-molecular-weight LOS components may also be useful
as a means of avoiding immune escape (3). Further truncation
of the LOS molecule appears less likely to induce bactericidal LOS antibodies.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants AI-33517 and AI-40247 from the National Institutes of Health and by the Research Service of the VA Medical Center.
We thank Lane Pucko for manuscript preparation.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, 69 Butler St., SE, Atlanta, GA 30303. Phone: (404) 728-7688. Fax: (404) 329-2210. E-mail: dstep01{at}emory.edu.
Editor: D. L. Burns
| |
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