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Infection and Immunity, December 2001, p. 7293-7303, Vol. 69, No. 12
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.69.12.7293-7203.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Nonimmune Binding of Human Immunoglobulin A (IgA)
and IgG Fc by Distinct Sequence Segments of the EibF Cell Surface
Protein of Escherichia coli
Carol H.
Sandt* and
Charles W.
Hill
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033
Received 14 June 2001/Returned for modification 16 August
2001/Accepted 6 September 2001
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ABSTRACT |
The eib genes of Escherichia coli
encode surface-exposed proteins which bind immunoglobulins (Ig) such as
the Fc fragment of human IgG (IgG Fc) in a nonimmune manner. The
Eib proteins belong to a family which includes YadA of
Yersinia, UspA2 of Moraxella, and DsrA of
Haemophilus ducreyi. This family of surface-exposed proteins shares several features, such as the ability to impart resistance to human serum complement and a tendency to exist as stable
multimers. Four genes, eibA, eibC,
eibD and eibE, were previously identified
and cloned from ECOR-9, a strain from the E. coli
reference collection. EibC, -D, and -E bind human serum IgA in addition
to IgG, but no IgA binding has been observed for EibA. Here, we report
the cloning of a new eib gene, eibF, from a second strain of E. coli, ECOR-2. The product, EibF,
has a relatively strong preference for IgA. Like the other
eib genes, eibF attenuates serum
sensitivity, occurs as a stable multimer, and is associated with
a prophage. By subcloning portions of the eibA and
eibF genes, we have identified distinct sequence
segments sufficient to cause Ig binding, multimerization, and
discrimination between IgA and IgG. The ability to multimerize is
associated with a sequence close to the C terminus that is homologous
to other family members such as YadA. Binding of IgG Fc is associated
with a sequence that is highly conserved among all Eib proteins but
otherwise unique. Binding of IgA is associated with a sequence of EibF
that is not similar to any EibA sequence.
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INTRODUCTION |
The Eib (for Escherichia
coli immunoglobulin binding) proteins of E. coli are
members of a family of surface-exposed proteins which includes YadA of
Yersinia (15, 18, 19), UspA2 of
Moraxella (1, 2), and DsrA of Haemophilus
ducreyi (5). The Eib proteins have several phenotypic
features in common with these proteins, such as the ability to impart
resistance to human serum complement and a tendency to exist as highly
stable multimers. In addition to the properties shared with other
members of this protein family, the Eib proteins have the ability to
bind immunoglobulins (Ig) such as the Fc fragment of human IgG (IgG Fc)
in a nonimmune manner; i.e., a mechanism that does not require specific
recognition by antibody (17). The Eib proteins were
originally identified in 6 of 72 strains of the E. coli
reference (ECOR) strain collection (13). At that time, one
of six strains, ECOR-9, was selected for study, and it was found to
produce several distinct Ig binding proteins, each encoded by a
different member of a set of related prophages. Four genes,
eibA, eibC, eibD, and eibE,
were cloned from ECOR-9. In multicopy form, each conferred Ig binding
activity on and attenuated the serum sensitivity of a test recipient.
In each instance, the Eib proteins were observed as multiple bands in
sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), some of the bands exceeding 200 kDa in apparent molecular mass (16). Consequently, the sizes of the Eib proteins appeared
much greater than predicted from the gene sequences, implying stable multimerization. Three of the four Eib proteins bound human serum IgA
in addition to IgG. The IgA binding signal was strongest for EibD, and
no signal was observed for EibA (16). Here, we report the
cloning and characterization of a new eib gene,
eibF, whose product has a particularly strong preference for
IgA. This gene was cloned from E. coli strain ECOR-2, a
strain originally isolated from the feces of a healthy human host
(13) and belonging to phylogenetic group A
(7). ECOR-2 differs from most group A ECOR strains in
having genes for several extraintestinal virulence-associated traits,
which are more common among group B2 strains (10). Like the eib genes of ECOR-9, eibF attenuates serum
sensitivity. By subcloning portions of the eibA and
eibF genes, we have identified sequence segments sufficient
to cause Ig binding, multimerization, and discrimination between IgA
and IgG. We also report that no binding to IgM or IgE can be detected
in extracts of the ECOR strains previously shown to bind Ig
(17) or in strains hosting the cloned eib genes.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Strains and culture conditions.
The ECOR collection of
E. coli strains was obtained from Robert Selander and Thomas
Whittam (13). E. coli K-12 strain DH5
was
used for cloning of all pOK12-based constructs and for expression of
eibF fusion constructs. E. coli strain JM109 was
used as the background strain for expression of eibA fusion
constructs. E. coli strain AB1157 was used as the background
strain for studies of serum resistance and accessibility to trypsin.
For expression of Ig binding activity in cells hosting pOK12
derivatives, 24-h Luria-Bertani (LB) broth cultures grown at
37°C with agitation were used. For cells hosting pMal-c2X-based
fusion plasmids, cells were similarly grown to an optical density at
595 nm of 0.5 and induced with 0.3 mM IPTG
(isopropyl-
-D-galactopyranoside) for 2 h.
Cells were harvested by centrifugation at 4°C. LB broth
containing ampicillin, 50 µg per ml, was used for the maintenance of
pMal-c2X fusion plasmids and pUC21 derivatives. LB broth containing
kanamycin, 50 µg per ml (LBKm broth), was used
to maintain pOK12 derivatives.
Protein extraction and Ig binding.
Preparation of cell
extracts, determination of protein concentration, SDS-PAGE, and
immunoblotting were as described previously (17). It is
important to note that the immunoblotting procedure used to detect
nonimmune Ig binding differs from traditional immunoblotting procedures
used to detect the binding of specific antibody to an antigen
(17). Our standard immunoblotting procedure entails a
one-step incubation with nonimmune antibody (such as normal serum IgA
or the IgG Fc) conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (HRP). There is
no incubation with primary antibody specifically directed against an antigen.
Purified IgG Fc conjugated with HRP (IgG Fc-HRP) (Rockland) was used at
a concentration of 20 ng of antibody per ml; purified whole human serum
IgA conjugated with HRP (IgA-HRP) (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories)
was used at 50 ng per ml. Human myeloma IgM Fc conjugated with
horseradish peroxidase (IgM Fc-HRP) (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories) was used at 4 µg per ml. Human monoclonal IgE
(Biodesign International) was conjugated with HRP using the EZ Link
Activated Peroxidase Antibody Labeling kit (Pierce) according to the
manufacturer's instructions and was used at 250 ng or 2.5 µg per ml.
Antiserum directed against maltose binding protein (MBP) (anti-MBP)
developed in rabbit (New England Biolabs) was used at a dilution of
1/10,000 and was detected by HRP-conjugated anti-rabbit Ig developed in donkey (Amersham-Pharmacia Biotech) used at 100 ng per ml. Human polyclonal IgE (Biodesign International) was used at 33 µg per ml and
detected by use of HRP-conjugated mouse monoclonal anti-IgE (United
States Biological) at 50 ng per ml.
DNA cloning and analysis.
Techniques used for DNA isolation,
cloning, and sequence analysis involve minor modifications of those
indicated elsewhere (8, 16, 21). The plasmid vectors for
cloning were pOK12 (20) and pMal-c2X (New England
Biolabs). Cloning of the eibF gene utilized a partial
Sau3A digest of ECOR-2 genomic DNA. Fragments in the desired
size range were purified by agarose gel electrophoresis and with the
Qiaex II Gel Extraction kit (Qiagen), ligated into the BamHI
site of pOK12, and electroporated into E. coli strain DH5
. Colony blots of transformants were screened for IgA binding by
procedures based on published protocols (6, 16). Briefly, colonies were blotted to nitrocellulose and lysed in situ with 1% SDS
at 65°C for 30 min. The membranes were blocked with 10% (wt/vol)
nonfat dry milk in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for 1 h,
washed, and incubated for 1 h with affinity-purified human serum
IgA conjugated with HRP. The blots were washed, and film was
exposed. Deletions within the original cloned fragment were made
using convenient restriction sites; key plasmids are listed in Table
1. Oligonucleotide synthesis and
automated DNA sequencing were done by the Macromolecular Core Facility
of the Penn State College of Medicine. For all new sequences, both
strands were sequenced; for repetitive sequencing of essentially
identical segments, sequencing was sometimes limited to a single
strand. Nucleic acid and amino acid sequence similarity searches were done with the BLAST programs (3) without filters.
Protein fusions.
The pMAL protein fusion and purification
system (New England Biolabs) was used. The fusion constructs are shown
in Table 1 (see also Fig. 3). For the eibA fusion, an
HpaI site near the center of block 2 of EibA was used to
make an in-frame fusion between the N terminus of malE (410 codons) at the vector XmnI site and the C terminus of
eibA (141 codons), producing pDC2240 (Table 1; see Fig. 3A
through C). A set of plasmids with more limited inserts was derived
(Table 1; see Fig. 3C). For eibF, the initial fusion
construct pCS7269 was prepared in two steps. The first involved fusion
of eibF at an EcoR I site at codon 97 to an
EcoRI site in pMal-c2X. The second step involved deletion between XmnI of the vector and the EcoRI site,
which brought 363 codons of the eibF sequence into frame
with the malE open reading frame (ORF) (Table 1; see Fig.
3A, D, and E). A set of plasmids with more limited inserts was derived
from pCS7269 (Table 1; see Fig. 3E). PCR was used to construct pCS7286
and pCS7296 using primers which introduced appropriate restriction
sites for cloning (Table 2).
Trypsin treatment of intact cells.
Trypsinization of intact
cells was as described previously (17). Briefly, cells
were diluted to 10% (wt/vol) in 50 mM potassium phosphate, pH 6.1, containing trypsin at concentrations of 5, 50, or 500 µg per ml and
incubated for 1 h at 37°C. The digestion was stopped with 2 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and the cells were harvested by
centrifugation. Control cells lacking trypsin were similarly treated.
Serum sensitivity assay.
Serum sensitivity was determined as
described previously (16). In brief, 24-h cultures grown
in LBKm broth were washed in PBS and thoroughly
resuspended in PBS by vortexing. Control cells harboring vector pOK12
alone or test cells harboring a cloned eib gene were seeded
in 150 µl of 25% unheated human serum complement (Sigma) or PBS at a
concentration of 2 × 108 CFU per ml. Five
replicate samples of cells were incubated with serum, and three samples
were incubated with PBS. The cells were shaken at 37°C for 1 h
in PBS. Serial dilutions were prepared from each replicate and plated
on LBKm agar.
Nucleotide sequence accession number.
A 3,167-bp segment of
DNA containing eibF and adjacent DNA was sequenced. The
GenBank accession number is AF399847.
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RESULTS |
Cloning of a gene for an IgA binding protein from ECOR-2.
In a
screen of ECOR strains for the binding of human serum IgA, we observed
that ECOR-2 extracts bound IgA with an unusually strong signal (Fig.
1A, compare lane 1 to lanes 2 through 6). On the other hand, the signal for binding the IgG Fc was relatively weak for ECOR-2 (Fig. 1B, compare lane 1 to lanes 3, 4, and 6). Because
of its strong IgA binding signal, ECOR-2 was chosen as the source
strain to clone a gene for an Ig binding protein with a strong
preference for IgA. A 3,167-bp segment of DNA was cloned into pOK12 and
detected in a direct screen of colonies for IgA binding (see Materials
and Methods). This segment contained three ORFs. The amino acid
sequence predicted by one of these ORFs was related to that of the
eib genes previously cloned from ECOR-9, and it was
designated eibF. Similarity was particularly strong for the
C-terminal 167 codons, where sequence conservation among the
eib genes of ECOR-9 is greatest. Sequencing of the regions adjoining eibF revealed exactly the same organization of
genes as previously seen with the P-Eib prophages of ECOR-9
(16). This suggested that eibF is carried by a
prophage similar to those described for ECOR-9 (see below).

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FIG. 1.
Ig binding of ECOR strains. Whole-cell extracts from
24-h broth cultures were fractionated by SDS-PAGE (8% acrylamide) and
blotted to polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF). The blot was incubated
sequentially with human IgG Fc-HRP (B) and IgA-HRP (A). Lanes: 1, ECOR-2; 2, ECOR-5; 3, ECOR-9; 4, ECOR-12; 5, ECOR-43; 6, ECOR-72. Each
lane contained approximately 30 µg of protein.
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A subclone comprising 2,049 bp was sufficient to confer Ig binding.
This segment contained
eibF and extended 106 bp upstream
from the translational start codon. The
eibF sequence
predicted
a 49.5-kDa protein, considerably smaller than the Ig binding
activities
observed for its source, ECOR-2. However, the Ig binding
activity
conferred by cloned
eibF occurred as two IgA
binding bands whose
sizes (158 kDa and larger) were similar to those
found in ECOR-2
(Fig.
2A, compare lane 7 to lane 1). Of particular interest, the
signal for IgA binding
conferred by
eibF was stronger than for
any of the
eib genes cloned from ECOR-9 (Fig.
2A, compare lane
7 to
lanes 3 through 6), while the signal for IgG Fc binding by
EibF was
comparable to that of EibA, EibC, EibD, and EibE (Fig.
2B, compare lane
7 to lanes 3 through 6).

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FIG. 2.
Ig binding conferred by cloned eib genes.
Extracts were prepared and fractionated on duplicate gels by SDS-PAGE
(8% acrylamide) as shown in Fig. 1. One gel was blotted to PVDF and
the other was stained with Coomassie brilliant blue (C). The blot was
incubated sequentially with IgG Fc-HRP (B) and IgA (A). Lanes: 1, positive control ECOR-2; 2, negative control pOK12; 3, eibA(pCS6379); 4, eibC(pCS6431); 5, eibD(pCS6364); 6, eibE(pCS6432); 7, eibF(pCS7216). Each lane contained approximately 10 µg
of protein. E. coli DH5 was used as the background
strain for all constructs (lanes 2 to 7).
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Lack of binding human IgM and IgE.
In view of the differential
binding of IgG Fc and IgA by proteins from the ECOR strains and cells
harboring the cloned eib genes, we extended our efforts to
test binding of human IgM and IgE. The binding of IgE was analyzed by
two methods. The first involved a one-step incubation of immunoblots
with monoclonal IgE-HRP; the second involved a two-step incubation,
first with polyclonal IgE and second with an HRP-conjugated mouse
monoclonal antibody directed against human IgE. The binding of IgM Fc
was analyzed by direct binding of monoclonal IgM Fc-HRP to immunoblots. None of the Ig binding proteins present in the ECOR strains or clones
bound human myeloma IgE, polyclonal IgE, or the monoclonal IgM Fc
fragment with a signal above background (data not shown).
Comparison of EibF from ECOR-2 to Eib proteins from ECOR-9.
For purposes of discussion in our earlier report, five regions
of amino acid homology shared by the various Eib proteins derived from
ECOR-9 were designated blocks 1 through 5 (16). Figure 3B shows an eib gene with
designated regions corresponding to blocks 1 through 5. For purposes of
the present discussion, we have further designated the segment between
blocks 1 and 2 block V (variable). Block 1 is part of a putative signal
sequence for export of the proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane.
Block 5 is an outer membrane-targeting motif consisting of nine
alternating hydrophobic residues ending in phenylalanine. Block 4 is a
region of homology shared by a family of cell surface proteins whose members include YadA of Yersinia (15, 18, 19),
UspA2 of Moraxella (1, 2), and DsrA of H. ducreyi (5). Blocks 2 and 3 are regions of homology
shared by the Eib proteins but not other proteins in the databases;
block 3 is predicted to assume a coiled-coil structure
(16). Analysis of the EibF sequence revealed the same
overall organization and blocks of homology. The block 4 sequence of
EibF is more similar to the corresponding region found in the other Eib
proteins (87 to 100% identity) than to that found in the other members
of this family of proteins (e.g., identities of 68% for UspA2 and 70%
for YadA). Comparing EibF to the other Eib proteins, the 167-amino-acid
sequence covering blocks 2 through 5 was most similar to EibA (94%
identity) and least similar to EibE (78% identity). The portion of
EibF designated block V was much more divergent than the last 167 amino
acids, although block V contained a sequence with limited similarity to
EibD (30% identity over 185 amino acids), EibC (33% identity over 130 amino acids), and EibE (25% identity over 142 amino acids); no
homology to EibA was found in block V.

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FIG. 3.
Fusion of eibA and eibF to
malE. In-frame fusions between eibA or
eibF and malE of vector pMal-c2X were
made, and deletion constructs were derived from them as described in
Materials and Methods. (A) malE, showing restriction
sites and position of cloned inserts; (B) eibA, showing
restriction sites, blocks, and amino acids encoded by each block (see
text); (C) malE-eibA fusion and derived deletion
constructs; (D) eibF, showing restriction sites, blocks,
and amino acids encoded by each block (see text); (E)
malE-eibF fusion and derived deletion constructs. Map
units are in kilobases. These constructs were used in the
experiments shown in Fig. 5 and 6, whose results are summarized in the
column on the right as binding (+) or nonbinding ( ) of IgG Fc and
IgA, and presence (+) or absence ( ) of stable
multimerization.
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Two types of imperfect repeats were found in EibF. The first type
consisted of a set of three tandem repeats located in block
V. Figure
4 shows the position of these repeats,
designated f1,
f2, and f3 (Fig.
4A) and their alignments (Fig.
4B).
Repeats f2
and f3 each contained 26 amino acids; f1 was a partial
repeat
containing 11 amino acids. Versions of this repeat were also
found
in EibC and EibD (designated c2 and d2) but not in EibA or EibE.
Amino acid identities ranged from 62 to 69% in pairwise comparisons
among the f1, f2, f3, and d2 repeats. A second type of imperfect
repeat
consisting of 19 amino acids in EibF and EibA was identified.
In each
case, the first copy (designated f4 in EibF and a4 in
EibA) occurred
within block V at a position immediately preceding
block 2. The second
copy (designated f5 in EibF and a5 in EibA)
occurred within block 2;
the sequence of f5 was identical to a5.
Repeats f4 and f5 of EibF had
84% amino acid identity, whereas
repeats a4 and a5 had 53% identity.

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FIG. 4.
Sequence comparison for EibF, EibD, and EibA. (A) Amino
acid sequence alignment showing positions of repeated sequences and
blocks 1, V, and 2 to 5. Block designations are shown above the
sequence. Repeats f1, f2, f3, and d2 are shaded; repeats a4, a5, f4,
and f5 are underlined. The first amino acid in each block and repeat is
shown in boldface. (B) Repeated sequence alignments. Invariant amino
acids are shown in boldface.
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Functional mapping.
Two striking properties of the Eib
proteins are Ig binding (IgG Fc and/or IgA) and stable multimerization
(defined as resistance to dissociation after being boiled in SDS-PAGE
sample buffer containing 6% SDS and 2-mercaptoethanol). In every case
previously described, Ig binding signals were associated with Eib
protein bands representing much larger molecular masses than predicted
from the eib gene sequences. This raised the possibility
that multimerization might be important or even essential for Ig
binding. If, on the other hand, Ig binding and multimerization are
independent functions, then it should be possible to separate these
functions experimentally. More specifically, it might be possible to
identify sequence segments that can confer Ig binding without
multimerization or vice versa. By further extension of this analysis to
segments of EibA and EibF, it might be possible to identify portions of
the sequences which allow discrimination between IgG and IgA.
Accordingly, we constructed protein fusions to screen specific sequence
segments. Our choice was constrained by previous observations. Namely,
deletion of as few as five codons from the C terminus of the Eib
proteins (i.e., the region encoding the outer membrane-targeting motif) abolished both the Ig binding activity and the high-molecular-mass Eib
proteins observed on Coomassie brilliant blue-stained gels (16). This result suggested that transport of protein
through the cytoplasmic membrane in the absence of a signal for
insertion into the outer membrane caused complete loss. To avoid
problems associated with Eib proteins lacking their normal C termini,
we adopted a fusion strategy which would keep the proteins in the cytoplasm. Our choice was the pMAL-c2X protein fusion and purification system (New England Biolabs). The strategy involved fusing an eib gene to the N terminus of the malE gene of
the plasmid vector pMal-c2X. Since the MBP encoded by malE
of pMal-c2X lacks a signal sequence, the fusion proteins derived from
it are retained in the cytoplasm. In this system, expression of the
MBP-Eib fusion proteins is controlled by IPTG. A significant advantage
of the system is that antibody directed against MBP provides a means of
detecting derivatives of the Eib proteins even when nonimmune Ig
binding is abrogated. The fusion plasmids and deletion derivatives are
described in Table 1. Figure 3 shows the amino acid coordinates within
the amino acid sequences and the relationship to blocks 2 to 5 of EibA
(Fig. 3C) and EibF (Fig. 3E). The amino acid coordinates for these
blocks are given in Fig. 3B and D.
(i) Eib A protein fusions.
A fusion was made between the
N-terminal 410 codons of malE (Fig. 3A) and the C-terminal
141 codons of eibA (Fig. 3B), producing pDC2240 (Fig. 3C).
The eibA portion consequently retained 27 amino acids of
block 2 and all of blocks 3 to 5. The construct was assessed by
immunoblotting for its ability to confer binding of IgG Fc and
multimerization of the encoded protein. Figure
5 shows an immunoblot which was incubated
sequentially with IgG Fc-HRP (Fig. 5A) and rabbit anti-MBP (Fig. 5B).
The fusion protein encoded by pDC2240 was expressed in the form of
several discrete IgG Fc binding bands ranging in size up to and
exceeding 200 kDa (Fig. 5A, lane 2). This indicated that domains
sufficient for binding IgG Fc and for multimerization both lay within
the last 141 amino acids of EibA. It should be mentioned
parenthetically that the fusion protein has no cysteine residues, so it
cannot participate in a disulfide bond. This initial construct was
modified by deletion of the final 50 amino acids (pDC2283). This
deletion eliminated the high-molecular-mass forms but not IgG Fc
binding activity; a single IgG Fc binding band occupied the position
close to that expected of a monomer (Fig. 5A, lane 3). A fusion protein
which retained only the last 92 amino acids of EibA (pDC2252) failed to
bind IgG Fc (Fig. 5A, lane 4) but was still able to form bands larger
than 200 kDa (recognized by anti-MBP) (Fig. 5B, lane 4). A fusion
protein lacking the last 94 amino acids of EibA (pCS7299) failed to
bind IgG Fc (Fig. 5A, lane 5) and failed to form large bands, appearing
instead as a monomer-sized band recognized by anti-MBP (Fig. 5B, lane
5). Combining these results, we conclude that a fragment retaining only
the C-terminal 141 amino acids of the 392-amino-acid EibA protein can
mediate formation of large multimeric structures which bind IgG Fc.
Consequently, neither block V nor the first 28 amino acids of the
sequence identified as block 2 are essential for these properties.
Deletion of the last 50 amino acids abrogates multimerization but not
IgG Fc binding, while deletion of the first 49 of those 141 amino acids
abrogates IgG Fc binding but not multimerization, indicating that
different parts of the protein are essential for binding IgG Fc and
multimerization. Of the constructs tested, the smallest fragment
retaining IgG Fc binding activity included 27 amino acids of block 2, all 46 amino acids of block 3, and the first 14 amino acids of block 4.

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FIG. 5.
MBP-EibA fusions. Broth cultures were grown and induced
with IPTG, and whole-cell were extracts prepared as described in
Materials and Methods. Equivalent amounts of cell extracts were
fractionated by SDS-PAGE (8% acrylamide) and blotted to PVDF. The blot
was incubated first with human IgG Fc-HRP (A) and second with rabbit
anti-MBP developed with donkey anti-rabbit Ig (B) (see Materials and
Methods). Lanes: 1, pMal-c2X; 2, EibA (amino acids [aa] 254 to
392), pDC2240; 3, EibA (aa 254 to 344), pDC2283; 4, EibA (aa 300 to
392), pDC2252; 5, EibA (aa 254 to 298), pCS7299; 6, EibF (aa 318 to
459), pCS7280.
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(ii) EibF protein fusions.
A malE-eibF fusion
was constructed which contained the final 363 codons of the
eibF sequence (amino acids 97 through 459); this construct
(pCS7269) included 196 codons preceding block 2 (Fig. 3E). The fusion
construct conferred both IgA binding (Fig. 6A, lane 1) and IgG Fc binding (Fig. 6B,
lane 1), and both activities were associated with multimerized
structures.

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FIG. 6.
MBP-EibF fusions. Blots were prepared as described in
the legend to Fig. 4 except that the amount of extract loaded in lane 7 was four times the volume loaded in other lanes. The blots were
incubated sequentially, first with IgA-HRP (A), second with IgG Fc-HRP
(B), and finally with rabbit anti-MBP developed with donkey anti-rabbit
Ig-HRP (C) (see Materials and Methods). Lanes: 1, EibF (aa 97 to 459),
pCS7269; 2, EibF (aa 97 to 399), pCS7285; 3, EibF (aa 97 to 353),
pCS7296; 4, EibF (aa 318 to 459), pCS7280; 5, EibF (aa 181 to 280),
pCS7286; 6, EibF (aa 400 to 459), pCS7284; 7, EibF (aa 181 to
280), pCS7286.
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The preceding section has shown that only the C-terminal 141 amino
acids of EibA were required for IgG Fc binding to the fusion
protein.
Since EibA and EibF differ by only 3 of these 141 amino
acids, it was
of obvious interest to test whether a comparable
construct derived from
EibF would bind IgG Fc and, more particularly,
whether it would also
retain the EibF feature of strong IgA binding.
The construct used
(pCS7280) actually contained the C-terminal
142 amino acids of EibF
(Fig.
3C). When tested it conferred IgG
Fc binding with multimerization
(Fig.
5A, lane 6, and Fig.
6B,
lane 4) but not IgA binding (Fig.
6A,
lane 4). This suggested
that segments nearer the N terminus of EibF
were necessary for
IgA binding. This was investigated by testing a
series of additional
fusions derived from the initial construct,
pCS7269. Deletion
of 60 amino acids from the C terminus (pCS7285)
abrogated multimerization,
but IgA and IgG Fc binding both remained
(Fig.
6A and B, lanes
2). Deletion of 106 amino acids from the C
terminus (i.e., an
additional 46 amino acids) (pCS7296) eliminated
detectable IgG
Fc binding (Fig.
6B, lane 3), but the fusion protein
retained
IgA binding (Fig.
6A, lane 3). This indicated that the
sequence
located between amino acids 97 and 353 was sufficient for
binding
IgA. This region contained the repeats f1, f2, and f3 (Fig.
4)
located between amino acids 207 and 269. We postulated that these
repeats might be important for IgA binding and focused on cloning
this
region. A 100-codon region of
eibF containing the repeats
was amplified by PCR and cloned into pMal-c2X to produce pCS7286
(see
Materials and Methods). Cells harboring this plasmid expressed
a
protein which bound IgA but not IgG Fc (Fig.
6A and B, lanes
5 and 7).
The apparent molecular mass was consistent with that
expected of a
monomer (54.3 kDa). It is important to note that
the binding signal was
greatly diminished compared to the protein
encoded by parent plasmid
pCS7269 and was detectable only by overexposing
the blot (Fig.
6A,
lower panel, lane 5) or overloading the sample
(Fig.
6A, lane 7). Ample
protein was present (Fig.
6C, lanes 5
and 7), suggesting that the loss
of binding signal was not due
to a reduction in the amount of the
fusion protein present in
the extract. We concluded that the 100-codon
region containing
repeated sequences f1, f2, and f3 was sufficient for
binding IgA,
although the binding signal was greatly diminished
compared to
that of the fusion encoded by pCS7296 (Fig.
6A, lower
panel, compare
lane 5 to lane
3).
Stable multimerization of Eib proteins.
Fusions containing the
C-terminal 141 (EibA) or 142 (EibF) residues of the protein produced a
series of bands, some exceeding 200 kDa in size (Fig. 5B, lanes 2 and
6), indicating that this region was sufficient for multimerization. A
fusion which contained only the last 92 amino acids of EibA (pDC2252)
also produced large-molecular-mass bands (Fig. 5B, lane 5). In
contrast, a fusion which contained only the last 60 amino acids of EibF
(pCS7284), failed to produce high-molecular-mass bands (Fig. 6C, lane
6). The fusion encoded by pCS7284 differs in size from that encoded by
pDC2252 by 33 amino acids, 26 residues from block 3 and 7 residues from
block 4. This suggested that amino acids in this region contribute to multimerization. However, the fusion encoded by pCS7285, which contained these 33 amino acids, failed to produce high-molecular-mass forms (Fig. 6C, lane 2), indicating that this region alone, while necessary, is not sufficient for multimerization.
Trypsinization of intact cells.
Ig binding material was
previously shown to be exposed at the cell surface and accessible to
trypsin in Ig binding ECOR strains (17). The outer
membrane-targeting sequence identified in the eib gene
sequences predicted that the Eib proteins expressed by the recombinant
eib clones would also be exposed at the cell surface and be
accessible to trypsin. This has been found to be the case for both EibA
and EibF. Intact cells harboring eibF or eibA
were treated with trypsin at various concentrations, harvested by
centrifugation, and then fractionated on duplicate gels. One gel was
used for immunoblotting, and one was stained with Coomassie brilliant
blue. Figure 7 shows an immunoblot
incubated sequentially with IgG Fc (Fig. 7A) and then IgA (Fig. 7B).
The stained gel is shown in Fig. 7C. The residual Ig binding activities
of cell-associated fragments of EibA are shown in Fig. 7A and
B, lanes 1 through 4, and those of EibF in lanes 5 through 8. Trypsin at the highest concentration used (500 µg per ml) completely
eliminated binding of IgG Fc to both proteins (Fig. 7A, lanes 4 and 8)
and binding of IgA to EibF (Fig. 7B, lane 8). It also eliminated
the Eib proteins observed by staining (Fig. 7C). Examination of the
other proteins in the stained gel showed that most were unaffected by
treatment with trypsin (Fig. 7C, compare lanes 2 through 4 to lane 1 and lanes 6 through 8 to lane 5). Trypsin at lower concentrations (5 or
50 µg per ml) produced an array of cell-associated Ig binding fragments of various sizes (Fig. 7A and B, lanes 2 and 3). Observation of these intermediate profiles provided important insights into EibF
protein structure. Examination of Fig. 7 showed that EibF fragments of
approximately 38 to 80 kDa bound IgG Fc (Fig. 7A, lanes 6 and 7) but
did not bind IgA (Fig. 7B, lanes 6 and 7). Only the larger (>100-kDa)
fragments bound both IgG Fc and IgA (Fig. 7A and B, lanes 5). If we
make the assumption that the Eib proteins insert into the outer
membrane by interactions involving their C termini, then we would
anticipate that sequences closer to the N terminus would be more
sensitive to trypsin. These results therefore supported those obtained
with fusion proteins and were consistent with a model in which IgG Fc
binding is specified by a region of EibF, which is closer to the C
terminus than the region specifying IgA binding. Trypsin-treated cells
expressing EibA also had relatively small (approximately 30- to 90-kDa)
cell-associated fragments which bound IgG Fc (Fig. 7A, lanes 2 and 3).
This would be expected, since the region responsible for binding IgG Fc
was mapped to blocks 2 and 3, a region which is highly conserved
between Eib proteins A and F.

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FIG. 7.
Trypsin treatment of cells expressing EibA or EibF.
Whole cells containing cloned eibA (lanes 1 to 4) or
eibF (lanes 5 to 8) were treated with trypsin at
concentrations of 5 (lanes 2 and 6), 50 (lanes 3 and 7), or 500 (lanes
4 and 8) µg per ml (see Materials and Methods). Whole-cell extracts
were prepared and fractionated on duplicate gels by SDS-PAGE (8%
polyacrylamide) as described in the legend to Fig. 2. One gel was
blotted to PVDF and then incubated sequentially with IgG Fc-HRP
(A) and IgA-HRP (B). The second gel was stained with Coomassie
brilliant blue (C). Arrows, EibA (lane 1) and EibF (lane 5) when
trypsin was not added.
|
|
Prophage genes linked to eibF.
All four of the
eib genes cloned from ECOR-9 were found to be located in the
genomes of prophage. The respective prophages were designated P-EibA
through P-EibE, according to the associated eib gene
(16). To determine whether eibF was also part
of a prophage, we analyzed the nucleotide sequences adjacent to
eibF. Sequencing revealed that an organization identical to
that previously found for the other four eib genes in the
neighboring ORFs homologous to both ORF-191 (upstream) and ORF-156
(downstream) was present. The amino acid sequence predicted by
eibF-linked ORF-191 was 93 to 94% identical to that
predicted by homologs from P-EibC, P-EibD, and P-EibE. Comparison of
this ORF-191 to the homolog found in P-EibA revealed 96% identity, but
only for 113 amino acids beginning at amino acid 60. (ORF-191 of P-EibA
is not homologous to the other versions of ORF-191 or to any sequences
in the databases for the first 61 amino acids.) The amino acid sequence
predicted by eibF-linked ORF-156 was 92 to 94% identical to
that predicted by homologs from P-EibA, P-EibC, and P-EibD but only
69% identical to that from P-EibE. It is interesting that the ORF-156
associated with eibF contains a 117-bp sequence which is
94% identical to a sequence found in bacteriophage 933W
(14) and bacteriophage VT2-Sa (12) of
E. coli O157:H7.
As previously reported and in contrast to successes for
eibC,
eibD, and
eibE, we were unable
to demonstrate infectious transfer
of
eibA from ECOR-9
(
16). Attempts to demonstrate infectious
transfer of
eibF from ECOR-2 were also negative, although we were
able
to demonstrate the infectious transfer of two other genes,
both
conferring binding activity for IgG Fc (but not IgA) on recipient
E. coli (unpublished data). Our tentative conclusion, based
on
the similar gene organization and homology, is that
eibF
is part
of a prophage genome, most likely a defective one. This new
prophage
has been designated P-EibF.
eibF attenuates serum sensitivity.
The
eib genes cloned from ECOR-9 were previously shown to
enhance the serum resistance of E. coli strain AB1157, a
strain which is known to be particularly sensitive to serum
(16). Cloned eibF was tested for this property
and compared to eibA. Cells were exposed to 25% human serum
or control PBS for 1 h, diluted, and plated. The results of a
representative experiment are shown in Fig.
8. Only 0.006% of control cells
harboring vector survived serum treatment, while 0.36% of cells
harboring eibA and 1.67% of cells harboring eibF
survived (Fig. 8). A survival ratio was calculated for cells harboring
each gene by dividing its survival frequency by the survival
frequency observed for the control (4). The survival
ratios conferred by the eib genes in these experiments were
58 (eibA) and 267 (eibF), representing 58-fold
and 267-fold protection of strain AB1157. By way of comparison, gene
bor of bacteriophage lambda confers a 23-fold protection
upon this strain, increasing the survival of this strain in 20% guinea
pig serum from 0.0013 to 0.031% (4).

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FIG. 8.
Attenuation of serum sensitivity imparted by
eibF. E. coli AB1157 cells containing cloned
eibF(pCS7216), eibA(pCS6379), or vector
(pOK12) were treated with 25% human serum complement (open bars) or
PBS (hatched bars) for 1 h. The cells were diluted and plated (see
Materials and Methods). Each bar represents the mean of three (PBS) or
five (serum) replicate treatments. Error bars indicate standard
deviations.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
This report documents the cloning of a new eib gene,
eibF, from a second strain of E. coli, ECOR-2.
EibF, the protein encoded by eibF, occurred as a multimer
which bound human serum IgA in addition to human IgG Fc. EibF has many
similarities to Eib proteins A, C, D, and E of ECOR-9. These include
two sorting signals: a signal sequence for export (block 1) and a
C-terminal outer membrane protein-targeting motif (block 5). It also
includes a region of sequence homology (block 4) which defines a family
of proteins that includes YadA, UspA2, and DsrA. EibF contains
additional regions having homology to Eib proteins but not to other
proteins in the database (blocks 2 and 3). Like the other Eib proteins, EibF has a sequence, block V, located between blocks 1 and 2 which shows greater diversity than other parts of the protein.
All Eib proteins so far studied share two features, binding of IgG Fc
and stable multimerization. EibF, but not EibA, possesses an additional
significant feature, that of IgA binding. All of these traits were
retained by appropriate protein fusion constructs. By testing a series
of protein fusions containing different portions of EibA and EibF, we
have found that these three functional traits are encoded by different
sequence segments and can be separated from one another. Both the
C-terminal 141-amino-acid segment of EibA and the corresponding
142-amino-acid segment of EibF bound IgG Fc (Fig. 5, lanes 2 and 6).
Since the two amino acid sequences are 98% identical, their similar
activity in this test was not surprising. The 142-amino-acid segment
from EibF did not impart IgA binding activity to the fusion (Fig. 6A,
lane 4). A sequence nearer the N terminus was found necessary. A fusion
bearing 100 amino acids derived from EibF was sufficient to permit IgA
binding (Fig. 6A, lane 5). Significantly, the sequences sufficient for IgA binding (amino acids 181 to 280 of the EibF sequence) did not
overlap the sequences sufficient for IgG Fc binding (amino acids 318 to
459). Consequently, the essential binding contacts of EibF for IgA and
IgG Fc are completely different. This IgA specificity portion lies
within block V of EibF and no significant sequence similarity of EibF
block V to EibA is seen. The IgA specificity portion included a set of
imperfect tandem repeats, f1, f2, and f3. Both f2 and f3 contain 26 amino acids, while f1 has only the last 11 residues of the repeat.
Interestingly, EibC and EibD, which also bind IgA, each have a single
copy of this repeat while EibA has none. The position of repeat copy d2
within the EibD sequence and its alignment with those of EibF are
designated in Fig. 4. It seems quite possible that this repeat sequence
plays a key role in IgA binding by those Eib proteins that possess it. Our studies of IgA binding do not permit conclusions regarding the
portion (Fc or Fab) of the IgA molecule involved in binding, since all
IgA binding studies were done with the whole molecule.
The formation of highly stable multimers is a property of all Eib
proteins as well as the related cell surface proteins YadA, UspA2, and
DsrA. With each of these proteins, multimers are stable in SDS-PAGE
sample buffer, and for all except DsrA, the multimers are stable even
upon heating to 100°C. This family of proteins shares a region of
sequence homology which we have designated block 4 for the Eib
proteins. A fusion that retained only the C-terminal 92 amino acids of
EibA (pDC2252) still formed stable multimers (Fig. 5B, lane 4). This
fusion included block 4 and the outer membrane-targeting signal along
with 26 additional amino acids proximal to the N terminus. Deletions
within this homology block have shown its importance in the
oligomerization of YadA (19). This region has been
predicted to take the form of a membrane anchor domain formed by four
amphipathic transmembrane
-strands in this family of proteins
(9).
Formation of stable multimers is not essential for either IgA or IgG Fc
binding. This was concluded from observations of a fusion involving
EibA (pDC2283) which binds IgG Fc without stable multimerization (Fig.
5A, lane 3) and a fusion of EibF (pCS7285) which binds both IgA and IgG
Fc without stable multimerization. Nevertheless, we found that
constructs that did not form stable multimers yielded weaker binding
signals for both Ig types. For example, the signal for binding IgG Fc
was much stronger for a fusion containing the last 363 amino acids and
which formed stable multimers than for one lacking the last 60 of these
residues and which did not form multimers (Fig. 6B and C, compare lanes
1 and 2). Our data do not permit conclusions about the nature of
stable multimerization, i.e., whether the multimers contain only Eib proteins or whether they contain additional components which have not
yet been characterized. The binding signal was also diminished dramatically by the deletion of other regions not implicated in multimerization. For example, the signal for binding IgG Fc was much
stronger for the fusion containing the last 363 residues of EibF than
for one containing only the last 142, even though both formed multimers
(Fig. 6B and C, compare lanes 1 and 4). It is possible that Ig binding
requires the reassociation of monomers after they have been blotted to
a membrane. Our data do not address this possibility.
Our original experiments using trypsin treatment were done with the
ECOR strains themselves, and we sought to verify that the Eib proteins
expressed after cloning were also expressed at the cell surface. The
experiments shown in Fig. 7 not only supported the idea that cloned
EibF is present on the cell surface but yielded results that suggested
more detailed aspects of its exposure. Limited digestion produced an
array of species that retained Ig binding. Although reduced in apparent
size, these fragments were still significantly larger than the 49.5 kDa
expected for the original EibF monomer (e.g., Fig. A, lane 7). This
suggested that these various fragments all retained the potential for
stable multimerization. Only relatively large fragments, migrating at positions indicating a size of 100 kDa or greater, bound IgA as well as
IgG Fc (Fig. 7B, lane 7). Smaller fragments ranging from 60 to 70 kDa
(apparent size) bound IgG Fc but not IgA. These results suggested to us
that the N terminus of EibF is most exposed to trypsin, that the IgA
binding sites are more susceptible than the IgG Fc binding sites, and
that sites involved in multimerization are relatively protected. From
the experiments using MBP fusions, we had concluded that
multimerization requires Eib sequences near the C-terminal
outer-membrane insertion signal, including most if not all of block 4.
In addition to nonimmune Ig binding, all of the Eib proteins identified
so far attenuate the serum sensitivity of E. coli. All show
regions of high sequence conservation, within both the N-terminal 18 codons and the C-terminal 167 codons of the eib gene
sequences. In sharp contrast, sequence divergence characterizes block
V, which lies between these regions of high sequence conservation. This
pattern of highly conserved N and C termini, coupled with divergent
subterminal sequences, is a feature shared with variants of UspA2 and
the closely related UspA2H, as well as surface-exposed proteins of
numerous other pathogens (11). All of the eib
genes are associated with prophage, and this association provides a potential means for horizontal transfer. High sequence conservation is
also maintained among the variants of ORF-191 and ORF-156 which adjoin
the various eib genes. The presence of conserved flanking regions provides a potential site for recombination that would facilitate generation of new eib gene variants.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Du Chungen for expert technical assistance.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant GM16329 from the
National Institutes of Health and an Innovative Biotechnology Seed
Grant from the Pennsylvania State University Life Sciences Consortium.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Pennsylvania State College of
Medicine, Mail Services H171, Hershey, PA 17033-0850. Phone: (717)
284-2881. Fax: (717) 531-7072. E-mail: csandt{at}psu.edu.
Editor:
B. B. Finlay
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Infection and Immunity, December 2001, p. 7293-7303, Vol. 69, No. 12
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.69.12.7293-7203.2001
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