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Infection and Immunity, October 2001, p. 6419-6426, Vol. 69, No. 10
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.69.10.6419-6426.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Soluble Pilin of Neisseria
gonorrhoeae Interacts with Human Target Cells and
Tissue
Anne
Rytkönen,
Linda
Johansson,
Vendela
Asp,
Barbara
Albiger, and
Ann-Beth
Jonsson*
Microbiology and Tumor Biology Center,
Karolinska Institutet, S-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden
Received 9 March 2001/Returned for modification 18 May
2001/Accepted 12 July 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
Pili of Neisseria gonorrhoeae are phase-variable
surface structures that mediate adherence to host target cells. Each
pilus is composed of thousands of major pilus subunits, pilins,
pilus-associated protein PilC, and possibly other components. Piliated
and nonpiliated gonococcal clones may secrete a soluble smaller pilin
(S-pilin) that is cleaved after amino acid 39 of the mature pilin
protein. Here, purified S-pilin was found to migrate as a 61- to 64-kDa double band on nondenaturing gels, suggesting the formation of tetrameric S-pilin proteins with two isomeric forms. In situ studies of
binding to formalin-fixed tissue sections demonstrated the binding of
S-pilin to human tissue but not to tissue from mouse or rat organs,
showing the presence of a human-specific receptor-binding domain within
the pilin polypeptide. Pretreatment of the target tissues with
proteinase K decreased gonococcal binding dramatically, whereas
pretreatment with neuraminidase and meta-periodate,
which cleave carbon-carbon linkages between vicinal hydroxyl groups in
carbohydrates, did not affect gonococcal binding. In overlay assays,
purified S-pilin bound to a band with a migration pattern and size
similar to those of CD46, a cellular pilus receptor. Further, binding
of N. gonorrhoeae to target cells and tissues could be
blocked by both CD46 antibodies and purified S-pilin. These data argue
that S-pilin interacts with a protein domain(s) of the CD46 receptor on
human cells.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Neisseria gonorrhoeae is
an organism adapted to the human host, having no other ecological
niche. The initial step in N. gonorrhoeae infection involves bacterial attachment to the epithelial cell surface,
a process facilitated by pili, fimbrial appendages that extend from the
bacterial surface (30, 37). Each pilus is composed of
thousands of major pilin subunits, i.e., PilE proteins, of 20 kDa. PilE
is expressed as a precursor (propilin) with a seven-amino-acid
leader sequence. This leader peptide is cleaved off during transport
across the inner membrane. Gonococcal pili undergo both phase and
antigenic variations, and variant expression of pili on the gonococcal
surface is reflected in colony morphology. Structural variation of pili
results predominantly from recombination events between silent
(pilS) and expressed (pilE) pilin gene sequences, giving rise to a vast number of pilin structural variants. Many derivatives with a nonpiliated colony morphology express a soluble pilin, S-pilin, that is released into the culture supernatant at high
concentrations (7). S-pilin is cleaved after amino acid 39 of the mature pilin. Changes in the pilin sequence produce a spectrum
of S-pilin production and pilus expression levels that may influence
epithelial cell adherence (17). Glycosylation of pilin
favors the production of S-pilin but is not required for S-pilin
production in N. gonorrhoeae (19). The role of
S-pilin in N. gonorrhoeae pathogenesis and adherence has not
been determined, although S-pilin secretion has been proposed to allow
the release of toxic pilin monomers that cannot be efficiently
assembled into pili (7, 11).
PilC is a 110-kDa pilus-associated protein that is involved in
biogenesis and adherence functions of the pilus (10, 12, 23, 26,
27). Most strains carry two homologous but not identical pilC genes. The expression of each gene can be turned on and
off by frameshift mutations in a poly(G) tract in the signal peptide coding region (10). Spontaneous nonpiliated,
PilC
gonococcal derivatives of strain MS11 may
still express one or two pili but have often acquired new sequences in
the expression locus (11). Both nonpiliated
PilC+ and PilC
gonococcal
clones secrete S-pilin. PilC is present at the tip of the pilus fiber,
and purified PilC inhibits gonococcal adherence to host cells
(28, 29). However, the protein is also present in the
membranes and is exposed on the bacterial cell surface (25). In addition to PilC, adherence of N. gonorrhoeae to host cells is modulated by sequence changes in PilE
(12, 22, 26).
The gonococcal pilus interacts with CD46 (13), also called
membrane cofactor protein (MCP), a cell surface glycoprotein involved
in complement regulation. The protein is found on virtually all human
cell types except erythrocytes. CD46 protects host tissue from
complement activation by binding to C3b and C4b and serves as a
cofactor for factor I-mediated degradation of C3b and C4b. The
CD46 structure contains four complement control protein repeats (CCP-1
to CCP-4) of about 60 amino acids each, a
serine-threonine-proline-rich domain, a 12-amino-acid area whose
function is undefined, a transmembrane hydrophobic domain, a
cytoplasmic anchor, and a cytoplasmic tail. CD46 is expressed in four
major isoforms, BC1, BC2, C1, and C2, depending on alternative splicing
and choice of cytoplasmic tail, Cyt-1 or Cyt-2. Adherence of N. gonorrhoeae strain MS11 is highest to cells expressing the BC
isoforms (14). Further, the serine-threonine-proline-rich domain CCP-3 and the cytoplasmic tail Cyt-1 are crucial for the adherence of piliated N. gonorrhoeae to host cells.
The initial pilus-mediated adherence by CD46 is followed by a
second step of tight attachment. Opacity (Opa) proteins facilitate this
next step of bacterial adhesion and invasion of target epithelial cells. Several eucaryotic receptors for Opa have been identified. CD66,
an immunoglobulin superfamily cell adhesion molecule belonging to the
carcinoembryonic antigen family, is a eucaryotic receptor for the
majority of Opa proteins (4, 6, 35, 36). Also, certain
gonococcal Opa proteins interact with cell surface-associated heparan
sulfate proteoglycan receptors (3, 34). Invasion of
epithelial cells by piliated or Opa-expressing neisseriae involves cytoskeletal rearrangements (20, 21). It has been
demonstrated that interaction of Opa52-expressing
bacteria and CD66 on human neutrophils activates a signaling cascade
via Src-like protein tyrosine kinases rac1 and PAK (8).
In this study, S-pilin from PilC
gonococcal
clones was found to bind to human tissue sections but not to mouse or
rat tissue. Secreted S-pilin migrated as a 61- to 64-kDa band on
nondenaturing gels, suggesting the formation of a tetrameric unit with
two isomeric forms. Taken together, the data argue that S-pilin
interacts with the epithelial cell surface, most likely with the
cellular pilus receptor CD46.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains and growth conditions.
N.
gonorrhoeae MS11mk(P+)
and P
n have been described previously
(31). The
MS11mk(P+) strain sample
used in these studies is designated
MS11mk(P+)-u and is
referred to as MS11 in this paper. Variants MS11-8, MS11-6, MS11-5, and
MS11-3 are spontaneous nonpiliated PilC
derivatives of MS11 (11). A spontaneous
pilE mutant derivative of variant 8 was isolated on
plates. This clone was lacked the 5' end of pilE, as
demonstrated by PCR amplification and Southern blotting. Transmission
electron microscopy confirmed that most bacteria of variants MS11-8,
MS11-6, MS11-5, and MS11-3 were nonpiliated. One or two pili were seen
on ~10% of the cells. Bacteria were grown on GCB plates with
Kellogg's supplement (15) at 37°C in a 5%
CO2 atmosphere and passaged every 18 to 20 h. Outer membranes of the different variants and mutants were prepared
as previously described (10) in order to examine the
presence of Opa proteins. Aliquots of the outer membrane preparations
were heated at 100°C for 10 min or at 37°C for 10 min and
subsequently separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-12%
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and stained with Coomassie
brilliant blue. All of the variants used in this study lacked
detectable levels of Opa protein (data not shown).
S-pilin isolation.
Nonpiliated N. gonorrhoeae
MS11-8 (PilC
pilin+),
MS11-6 (PilC
pilin+),
MS11-5 (PilC
pilin+),
MS11-3 (PilC
pilin+), and
P
n (PilC+
pilin
) were grown in Catlin's defined medium
(2) for 18 to 44 h to an optical density at 550 nm of
1. The cultures were centrifuged for 1 h at 10,000 × g, whereafter the supernatant was recentrifuged under the
same conditions. Two liters of culture supernatant was concentrated in
Amicon cells to a final volume of 2 ml with YM10 diaflo ultrafiltration
membranes, followed by ultracentrifugation in a Ty65 rotor for 2 h
at 100,000 × g to remove high-molecular-weight material. All steps were performed on ice and in the presence of 1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride if possible. Extracts were tested in
immunoblots and on Coomassie blue-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gels for
the presence of S-pilin and lack of mature pilin. The total protein
extracts contained approximately 5 to 10% S-pilin. The presence of
S-pilin was confirmed by determination of the amino-terminal protein
sequence. For N-terminal sequence determination, S-pilin was subjected
to SDS-PAGE, the pilin band was transferred to an Immobilon
polyvinylidene difluoride filter by electroblotting, and the proteins
were stained and sequenced as previously described (10).
Concentrated supernatants were applied to mono-Q HR 10/10 (Pharmacia
Inc.) and Superdex 75HR 10/30 columns. The final preparation contained
less than 1% contaminating proteins.
DNA sequencing.
The pilE gene from gonococcal
variants was PCR amplified by using the primers
5'-AAATTTAAGGCCTATTTGCC-3' and 5'-TTTCCCCTTTCAATTAGG AGT-3'. Automated sequencing of purified PCR products was
performed by using the Taq DyeDeoxy terminator kit for cycle
sequencing (Applied Biosystems).
Cell lines and adherence assays.
ME180 cells (ATCC HTB33),
an epithelial cell-like cell line derived from a human cervical
carcinoma, was maintained in McCoy's 5A medium supplemented with 10%
fetal calf serum. The Wong-Kilbourne derivative of Chang conjunctiva
(ATCC CCL20.2), an epithelial cell line, was grown in medium 199 with
Earle's salts supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum. For adherence
assays, the cells were seeded into six-well plates at
105 cells/well and incubated in 5%
CO2 at 37°C for 1 to 2 days. Nonconfluent monolayers were overlaid with 200 µl of S-pilin preparations (2 µg/ml) or bacteria (107 bacteria/ml), incubated
for 1 h in 5% CO2 at 37°C, and washed six
times for 5 min each time in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS, pH 7.4).
Bound S-pilin was detected with PilE antiserum (diluted 1:50 in
blocking buffer) for 15 min, washed in PBS, incubated with fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated anti-rabbit immunoglobulin A (IgA;
Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.) diluted 1:80 in blocking buffer) for 15 min, and
finally washed for 5 min in PBS. Binding was evaluated by visual
inspection. Bound bacteria were counted on 100 cells in each experiment.
Immunoblots and antibodies.
For separation of eucaryotic
cells by SDS-PAGE, confluent layers of cells were washed in medium,
scraped off of the plastic bottle, washed twice in PBS (pH 7.4), and
thoroughly resuspended in PBS. Whole-cell extracts were subjected to
SDS-12% PAGE for detection of CD46. Proteins were transferred onto
polyvinylidene difluoride membranes and overlaid with digoxigenin
(DIG)-labeled S-pilin preparations (10 µg/ml) or unlabeled S-pilin
preparations and with polyclonal antiserum directed against MCP
(diluted 1:1,000) for 1 h at room temperature. Bound S-pilin or
MCP antibodies were detected with alkaline phosphatase (AP)-conjugated
monoclonal antibodies against DIG (diluted 1:1,000) (Boehringer
Mannheim) or IgG (Bio-Rad), respectively. For separation of bacterial
cells by SDS-PAGE, bacteria were scraped off of the plate, washed twice in PBS (pH 7.4), and thoroughly resuspended in PBS. Bacterial lysates
(10 µg) or protein preparations were subjected to SDS-15% PAGE. The
proteins were transferred from the gel to nitrocellulose sheets and
identified with polyclonal pilus antiserum or stained with Coomassie
brilliant blue. S-pilin was detected with pilin-specific antibodies and
AP-conjugated monoclonal antibodies against DIG (diluted 1:1,000)
(Boehringer Mannheim) or AP-conjugated anti-IgG (Bio-Rad). All samples
were boiled at 100°C prior to electrophoresis. The pilus antiserum
was raised in rabbits by using highly purified pilus preparations of
N. gonorrhoeae MS11(P+) as previously
described (10), and the pilus antiserum was generated to
the gel-purified 20-kDa pilin band in pilus preparations of strain MS11
separated by SDS PAGE (10).
Tissues and tissue-binding assays.
The human tissues used
have already been described (12). Rat stomach and
intestine were from male 6- to 8-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats, and the
mouse organs were from 6- to 8-week-old FVB/N mice (33).
Tissues were formalin fixed and embedded in paraffin in according with
a standard procedure (32). Sections of paraffin-embedded tissues were deparaffinized, rinsed in water and PBS (pH 7.4), and
incubated for 15 to 30 min in blocking buffer (0.2% BSA in PBS, pH
7.4) as previously described (12). Tissue sections were overlaid with 200 µl of S-pilin preparations (2 µg/ml) or with 107 bacteria, incubated for 1 h in 5%
CO2 at 37°C, and washed six times for 5 min
each time in PBS, pH 7.4. The slides were then incubated with PilE
antiserum (diluted 1:50 in blocking buffer) for 15 min, washed for 5 min in PBS, incubated with FITC-conjugated anti-rabbit IgA (Sigma)
diluted 1:80 in blocking buffer) for 15 min and finally washed for 5 min in PBS.
Sodium periodate oxidation and proteinase K treatment.
Cleavage of vicinal hydroxyl groups on carbohydrates by mild periodate
oxidation, followed by sodium borohydride reduction, was performed as
previously described (5, 38). Deparaffinized tissue
sections were incubated with 10 mM sodium meta-periodate in
50 mM sodium acetate buffer, pH 4.5, for 1 h at room temperature in the dark, followed by incubation for 30 min in sodium borohydride to
reduce the aldehyde groups generated by periodate oxidation to
alcohols. Control tissue slides were incubated in 50 mM sodium acetate
buffer without sodium meta-periodate. In order to confirm that polypeptide antigenicity remained intact after periodate oxidation, sections were overlaid with polyclonal antiserum specific for MCP. Carbohydrate signals in corneal and cervical tissues were
detected by using the concanavalin A lectin and in endometrial tissue
by using the Dolichos biflorus agglutinin lectin.
Deparaffinized tissue sections were incubated with 200 mU of proteinase
K from Tritirachium album (Sigma) for 1 h at
37°C or with 200 mU of neuraminidase from Vibrio cholerae
(Boehringer Mannheim) for 2 h at 37°C in a total volume of 200 ml. The tissue sections were then washed in PBS three times for 5 min
each time, blocked for 30 min in blocking buffer, and overlaid with a
bacterial suspension. Bacterial, carbohydrate, and protein signals were
detected as described above. Inhibition was evaluated by visual
inspection of the tissue.
 |
RESULTS |
S-pilin migrates as a tetramer on nondenaturing gels.
S-pilin
was purified from MS11-8, a nonpiliated PilC
pilin+ derivative of strain MS11. Pilin produced
from MS11-8 is cleaved predominantly into S-pilin, as determined by
immunoblotting with PilE antiserum (Fig.
1A). Culture supernatants of MS11-8 were concentrated by ultrafiltration. Such crude extracts contained approximately 5 to 10% S-pilin. S-pilin was further purified on a
mono-Q ion-exchange column. All fractions were analyzed by
immunoblotting with PilE-specific antiserum. Fractions containing
S-pilin (16 kDa) were pooled and purified on a Superdex 12 HR column.
The purified preparation obtained contained >99% S-pilin (Fig. 1B). The presence of S-pilin was confirmed by determination of the amino-terminal protein sequence. N-terminal sequencing of the 16-kDa
protein from variant 8 showed that the 16-kDa product is the result of
cleavage between Leu39 and
Ala40 of the mature pilin (data not shown).
Purified S-pilin preparations ran as a 61- to 64-kDa doublet band on a
nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel, suggesting that S-pilin from variant
MS11-8 is released as a tetramer and that there may be two isomeric
forms of this pilin complex (Fig. 1C). Similar purification
procedures were performed with three other nonpiliated
PilC
pilin+ derivatives
of MS11, i.e., MS11-6, MS11-5, and MS11-3. The PilE sequences of these
clones were determined and are shown in Fig. 2.

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FIG. 1.
Purified S-pilin migrates as a tetrameric unit under
nondenaturing conditions. (A) Immunoblot of gonococcal whole-cell
lysates using PilE-specific antiserum. Lanes: 1, MS11-8, a
PilC , S-pilin producing derivative of MS11; 2, MS11-P n. (B) Concentrated culture supernatants of
MS11-P n (lane 1) and MS11-8 (lane 2). Lane 3, purified
S-pilin preparation of MS11-8. The proteins were separated by SDS-15%
PAGE and stained with Coomassie brilliant blue. (C) S-pilin separated
on a nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel and stained with Coomassie
brilliant blue. S-pilin migrates as a tetrameric unit. Shown on the
left are molecular size markers (kilodaltons). N-terminal
sequencing of the 16-kDa protein showed that the 16-kDa product is
S-pilin.
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FIG. 2.
Deduced amino acid sequences of the pilE
genes in nonpiliated, PilC derivatives of N.
gonorrhoeae MS11. The S-pilin cleavage site is indicated by an
arrow. Amino acids identical to those of parental strain MS11 are
marked by dots. MC1 to MC6 mark the six variable minicassettes.
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S pilin binds specifically to human tissue.
In a previous
study, we demonstrated that piliated, but not nonpiliated,
gonococci adhere to fixed human tissue sections but not to
mouse or rat tissue (12). Bacteria bound to both
epithelial and subepithelial tissues, which is in agreement with the
distribution of the human pilus receptor CD46 (13). Little
is known about whether gonococcal S-pilin may adhere to receptors in
mammalian tissue. To study this, tissue sections and cells were
incubated with purified S-pilin. Binding of S-pilin was estimated by
fluorescence activity after detection with pilin-specific antiserum,
followed by FITC-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG.
All four S-pilin variants, MS11-8, MS11-6, MS11-5, and
MS11-3, bound to human cervix, endometrium, intestine,
stomach, midbrain,
and meninges (Table
1). Concentrated supernatants of
P

n gonococci did not show detectable
interaction with human tissues.
As illustrated in Fig.
3, binding to the complete tissue
section,
including both epithelial and subepithelial tissues, occurred.
S-pilin variants 5 and 6 differed from variants 3 and 8 by binding
much less efficiently to human cornea and conjunctiva tissue (Table
1).
Similarly, S-pilin variants 5 and 6 bound at low levels to
Chang
conjunctiva cells whereas all four S-pilin variants bound
to the ME180
cervical cell line (Table
1). The finding that preincubation
of
the S-pilin with pilin antibodies prevented detectable binding
of
S-pilin to target tissues or cells supported the presence of
a
eucaryotic receptor for S-pilin (data not shown). Binding of
S-pilin
was specific for human tissues and cells, since purified
S-pilin
(2 µg/ml) showed only low levels of fluorescence when
added to
tissue sections of mouse or rat organs (Table
1). Binding
of S-pilin to
cells and tissues was strictly temperature dependent;
the most
efficient binding to human tissue occurred at 37°C, intermediate
binding occurred at 25°C, whereas no binding of S-pilin was detected
at +4°C (data not shown).

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FIG. 3.
In situ assay of binding of S-pilin to fixed sections of
human cervical tissue. (A) Tissue section stained with
hematoxylin-eosin. (B) Tissue section overlaid with purified S-pilin
preparation of MS11-8 (1.5 µg/ml). (C) Tissue section overlaid with
concentrated supernatant of the P n variant (20 µg/ml).
Bound S-pilin was detected with PilE antiserum and FITC-conjugated
anti-rabbit IgG. The low fluorescence level still detected represents
the background of the FITC-labeled secondary antibody.
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S-pilin-binding sites in human tissue possess protein
characteristics.
In an earlier study, we showed that adherence of
piliated gonococci to human tissue was blocked by pretreatment of the
tissue section with proteinase K (12). Adherence was
unaffected by pretreatment with meta-periodate. Mild
meta-periodate oxidation under acidic conditions
destroys many (16), but not all (24), carbohydrate determinants by cleaving carbon-carbon linkages between vicinal hydroxyl groups without altering the structure of polypeptide chains.
In order to study the nature of a possible eucaryotic receptor for
S-pilin, tissue sections were pretreated with
meta-periodate,
neuraminidase, or proteinase K before
incubation with bacteria.
During these experiments, carbohydrate and
protein signals were
carefully monitored by using appropriate lectins
and protein antiserum
(Table
2).
Pretreatment of tissue with proteinase K abolished
S-pilin-associated
fluorescence, whereas periodate oxidation,
neuraminidase treatment,
or both neuraminidase and periodate pretreatments
of human
tissue did not affect the binding of S-pilin (Table
2 and Fig.
4). Tissues incubated with
P

n supernatants did not show any fluorescence.
Taken together,
these data argue that S-pilin may interact with a
protein or glycoprotein
on eucaryotic cells.

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FIG. 4.
Inhibition of S-pilin binding to human endometrial
tissue. (A) Tissue stained with hematoxylin-eosin. (B) Tissue overlaid
with purified S-pilin preparation of MS11-8 (1.5 µg/ml). (C)
Preincubation of the tissue with proteinase K prior to addition
of the MS11-8 S-pilin preparation. Bound S-pilin was detected with PilE
antiserum and FITC-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG. The low fluorescence
level still detected represents the background of the
FITC-labeled secondary antibody.
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S-pilin interacts with the pilus receptor CD46.
CD46 acts as a
cellular pilus receptor (13, 14). The protein is expressed
as four major isoforms that arise by alternative splicing, giving rise
to two classes of glycoproteins with molecular masses of 51 to 58 kDa
and 59 to 68 kDa. We have previously shown that purified gonococcal
pili bind to a doublet band of 55 to 60 kDa in overlay assays of
separated ME180 cells (13). To test whether the
soluble form of pilin, S-pilin, binds in a similar manner, whole-cell
extracts of ME180 were separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted onto
nitrocellulose membranes. Membranes were overlaid with a DIG-labeled
S-pilin-preparation of MS11-8. Bound S-pilin was detected with
antibodies directed against DIG or pili. Similarly to pilus organelles,
a double band of 55 to 60 kDa was labeled with S-pilin (Fig.
5). The DIG-specific antibody did not
cross-react with ME180 components in the size range of 50 to 60 kDa
(data not shown). An antiserum directed against CD46 labeled bands of the same size as S-pilin, i.e., 55 to 60 kDa. Further, there was no
binding of S-pilin to separated Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells that
lack CD46 expression. These data suggest that S-pilin contains a
CD46-binding domain.

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FIG. 5.
Purified gonococcal S-pilin binds to a protein of the
same size as CD46. SDS-PAGE of whole-cell lysates blotted onto a
nitrocellulose membrane. Lanes: 1, ME180 cells overlaid with
DIG-labeled S-pilin MS11-8; 2, ME180 cells overlaid with CD46 antiserum
and AP-conjugated IgG antibodies; 3, CHO cells overlaid with
DIG-labeled S-pilin of MS11-8.
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Purified S-pilin inhibits bacterial binding to epithelial
cells.
If S-pilin interacts with the CD46 cell surface receptor,
purified S-pilin of MS11-8, MS11-6, MS11-5, and MS11-3 should inhibit the adherence of piliated N. gonorrhoeae to target cells.
Figure 6 shows that preincubation of
ME180 cells with of S-pilin at 2 µg/ml dramatically reduced
bacterial binding. In addition, purified S-pilin blocked the
binding of piliated N. gonorrhoeae to human tissues
(data not shown). As a control in these assays, we used concentrated
supernatants of a pilE derivative of MS11-8. In this clone,
the 5' end of pilE was deleted, as determined by PCR and Southern blotting. The control supernatant did not inhibit the binding of S-pilin to target tissue (Fig. 6). Our earlier data have
demonstrated that polyclonal CD46 antiserum inhibits the adherence of
piliated gonococci to fixed tissue sections and to ME180 cells
(13). Incubation of tissue with CD46 antiserum prior to
overlay with S-pilin resulted in much-reduced fluorescence (data not
shown), supporting the interaction between CD46 and S-pilin.

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FIG. 6.
S-pilin inhibits adherence of P+ gonococci
to target cells. ME180 cells were preincubated with S-pilin (2 µg/ml)
for 30 min prior to the addition of piliated N.
gonorrhoeae MS11. Binding was allowed to occur for 1 h,
and bound bacteria were detected with gonococcal antiserum and
FITC-conjugated IgG. The control shows adherence of P+ MS11
to ME180 cells preincubated with supernatant of a pilE
derivative of MS11-8 for 30 min. Bound bacteria were counted on 100 randomly selected cells. Shown are the average of four independent
experiments and the standard deviation.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
In this paper, we show that gonococcal pilin fragments (S-pilins)
attach to human target tissue but not to mouse or rat tissue, indicating the presence of a receptor-binding domain within this pilin
polypeptide. The findings that adherence of piliated N. gonorrhoeae to human tissue or viable cells was blocked by
purified S-pilin and that binding of S-pilin was blocked by pilin
antibodies supported the presence of an S-pilin receptor on human
cells. Purified S-pilin bound to a wide variety of human tissues, and the receptor had the characteristics of a protein or a glycoprotein, as
evidenced by chemical and enzymatic treatment of fixed tissue sections.
Overlay assays with purified S-pilin demonstrated binding to a double
band of 55 to 60 kDa similar in size to CD46. Data showing that CD46
antiserum inhibited the S-pilin interaction with human target cells and
tissue support the idea that S-pilin plays an important role in
bacterial interaction with eucaryotic host cell surfaces.
There are two major forms of pilins, S-pilin and L-pilin. L-pilin is an
extra-long pilin that is neither secreted nor assembled into pili and
that results from insertion of tandem pilin copies into the expressed
copy. S-pilin is a truncated soluble pilin fragment that is
spontaneously released into the medium. Posttranslational proteolytic
cleavage of the full-size pilin occurs after amino acid 39 of the
mature pilin, removing the hydrophobic amino-terminal region, and
subsequent export and release of the truncated protein into the
supernatant (7). Here we show that purified S-pilin migrates as a 61- to 64-kDa band on nondenaturing gels, indicating the
formation of a tetrameric unit. Since a double band was present on
nondenaturing protein gels, it is possible that two isomeric forms are
secreted. The variation may represent incomplete processing at the
amino terminus, partial phosphorylation, or the presence of similar but
isoelectrically distinct proteins.
S-pilin isolated from PilC
clones attached to
human cervical and endometrial tissue, but not to mouse tissue,
indicating that PilC is not involved in this interaction. Further,
S-pilin bound to the complete tissue section, and the distribution of
N. gonorrhoeae receptors was not cell lineage specific.
However, the possibility cannot be excluded that the S-pilin
preparation contains trace amounts of a hitherto unidentified pilus
adhesin. Such an adhesin may be associated with S-pilin and could be
present in minor amounts not detectable by SDS-PAGE and staining. The
fluorescence observed with specific antibodies would thus detect an
S-pilin attached to an adhesin. No matter how this interaction is
accomplished, it is obvious that bacteria release a protein(s) that
interacts with the eucaryotic cell surface. Since preincubation of
S-pilin with pilin antibodies prevented the binding of S-pilin to
target cells, it is most likely that a receptor-binding site remains within the S-pilin polypeptide.
The finding that S-pilin may be secreted as a tetrameric unit supports
the possibility that a receptor-binding pocket is built up from a
combination of domains of different pilin subunits. It is tempting to
speculate that S-pilin may have a function in sending signals into the
eucaryotic cell. Since S-pilin interacts with human cells, it may
transfer a signal through the plasma membrane. It is, however, also
possible that S-pilins are required at an intracellular step or needed
for bacteria to be released from epithelial cells into the
subepithelial space. We have previously showed that piliated bacteria
are released from HEC-1 B cells in a nonpiliated
S-pilin-producing form (9). Since purified S-pilin
inhibits the adherence of piliated N. gonorrhoeae MS11 to
target cells, it is possible that secretion of S-pilin assists in the
spread of the bacteria to other organs or from one individual to another.
In this work, S-pilin variants 5 and 6 did not bind to corneal tissue
sections or Chang conjunctiva cells whereas S-pilin variants 3 and 8 bound well. These four S-pilin variants all carry slightly different
pilE sequences, suggesting that sequence variation in
S-pilin affects its interaction with human cells. Since S-pilin variants 3 and 6 differ by only three amino acids, it is clear that
minor changes in pilE may dramatically influence the
cell-binding capacity of the protein. These data are in agreement with
what has been observed for the adherence of whole gonococci to
epithelial cells. In an earlier study, we showed that sequence changes
in the major pilus subunit of N. gonorrhoeae lead to
variation in tropism to human tissue (12). Even earlier,
Rudel et al. (26) demonstrated that PilE sequence changes
affect the pilus-mediated adherence of N. gonorrhoeae to
human epithelial cells. The same observation has been reported for
N. meningitidis, namely, that antigenic variation of pilin
regulates the adhesion of meningococci to human epithelial cells
(22). Thus, the interaction of different S-pilin
sequence variants with target cells follows a pattern similar to
that of antigenically different pilus structures expressed in bacteria.
Cervical and endometrial tissues must express a different arsenal of
S-pilin receptor epitopes relative to corneal tissue, because different
binding degrees were obtained by using S-pilin variants with different
sequences. However, it may be that the receptor is structurally changed
or that the receptor concentration is lower in certain cell types. In a
recent paper, we reported that the adherence of piliated N. gonorrhoeae depends upon which isoform is expressed in a specific
cell type (14). The adherence of wild-type strain
MS11P+ to cells expressing the BC isoform of CD46
is most robust. In Chang conjunctiva cells, the C1 isoform is dominant
although expression of the BC1 isoform is also detected, whereas ME180
cells express only the BC1 and BC2 isoforms (14). In this
work, we demonstrate that S-pilin also binds better to ME180 cells than
to Chang cells. CD46 expression has been reported on both the apical
and basolateral sides of epithelial cells (1, 18)
Therefore, it is most likely that S-pilins have the ability to bind
both apical and basolateral membranes. Nonpiliated, revertible
S-pilin-producing bacteria still express a few pili and adhere at
moderate levels. These bacterial variants may still deliver S-pilin to
the mucosal surface. In addition, S-pilin may also have an
important function inside the cells.
It has been shown that PilC is located at the tip of the pilus
(28), where it theoretically has the potential to interact with CD46. Since S-pilin inhibits bacterial adherence to human target cells, the pilus tip structure is likely to interact with a
receptor domain close to the S-pilin-binding site. However, it is
possible that the intact pilus and soluble pilin interact with
different domains of CD46, giving rise to two distinct cellular responses. The adherence of piliated neisseriae is modulated by PilE
sequence variation. However, expression of PilC is required for
the adherence of N. gonorrhoeae to target cells (12,
23, 27). We have data showing that PilC also interacts with CD46 (B. Albiger and A.-B. Jonsson, Abstr. 12th Int. Pathogenic
Neisseria Conf., abstr. 156, 2000). This finding is in agreement
with the involvement of PilC and PilE sequence variation in the
attachment of piliated N. gonorrhoeae to host target cells.
The data in this work suggest that a eucaryotic receptor(s) for S-pilin
of N. gonorrhoeae is distributed on a wide variety of human
tissues and has the characteristics of a protein or a glycoprotein, as
evidenced by chemical and enzymatic treatments of fixed tissue
sections. Further, we demonstrate that S-pilin interacts with CD46, a
cellular receptor for the pilus structure. A future characterization of
the interaction between S-pilin and its cell surface receptor will
certainly lead to a better understanding of the role and function of
this secreted molecule in Neisseria pathogenesis. Also,
long-term experiments to investigate the exact biological function of
S-pilins and to tease out the epitopes on pilin that are responsible
for binding will be of great importance.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by grants from the Swedish Medical
Research Council (Dnr 10846), the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research/Infection and Vaccinology Program, the Swedish Cancer Society,
the Swedish Society of Medicine, the Magnus Bergvalls Stiftelse, the
Åke Wibergs Stiftelse, and the Anders Otto Svärds Stiftelse; by
Karolinska Institutet Research grants; and by the Clas Grochinsky
Foundation. B.A was supported by grants from the Wenner-Gren Foundation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: MTC, Karolinska
Institutet, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden. Phone: 46 8 728 71 66. Fax: 46 8 34 26 51. E-mail: Ann-Beth.Jonsson{at}mtc.ki.se.
Editor:
T. R. Kozel
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Infection and Immunity, October 2001, p. 6419-6426, Vol. 69, No. 10
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.69.10.6419-6426.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.