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Infect. Immun., May 1996, 1800-1809, Vol 64, No. 5
P Theiss, A Karpas and KS Wise
Antibodies to P29, a major lipid-modified surface protein of Mycoplasma
fermentans, reveal phase variation of surface epitopes occurring with high
frequency in clonal lineages of the organism. This occurs despite
continuous expression of the entire epitope-bearing P29 product (detected
by Western immunoblotting) and contrasts with phase variation of other
surface antigens mediated by differential expression of proteins. To
understand the structure and antigenic topology of P29, the single-copy p29
gene from strain PG18 was cloned and sequenced. The gene encodes a
prolipoprotein containing a signal sequence predicted to be modified with
lipid and cleaved at the N-terminal Cys-1 residue of the mature P29
lipoprotein. The remaining 218-residue hydrophilic sequence of P29 is
predicted to be located external to the single plasma membrane. Additional
Cys residues at positions 91 and 128 in the mature protein were shown to
form a 36-residue disulfide loop by selectively labeling sulfhydryl groups
that were liberated only after chemical reduction of monomeric P29. Two
nearly identical charged amino acid sequences occurred in P29, within the
disulfide loop and upstream of this structure. Two distinct epitopes
binding different monoclonal antibodies were associated with opposite ends
of the P29 protein, by mapping products expressed in Escherichia coli from
PCR-generated 3' deletion mutations of the p29 gene. Each monoclonal
antibody detected high-frequency and noncoordinate changes in accessibility
of the corresponding epitopes in colony immunoblots of clonal variants, yet
sequencing of the p29 gene from these variants and analysis of disulfide
bonds revealed no associated changes in the primary sequence or disulfide
loop structure of P29. These results suggest that P29 surface epitope
variation may involve masking of selected regions of P29, possibly by other
surface components undergoing phase variation by differential expression.
Differential masking may be an important mechanism for altering the
antigenic or functional surface topology of this mycoplasma and other
wall-less mycoplasmas.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Antigenic topology of the P29 surface lipoprotein of Mycoplasma fermentans: differential display of epitopes results in high-frequency phase variation
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia 65212, USA.
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