Structural determination of Rickettsia lipid A without chemical extraction confirms shorter acyl chains in later-evolving spotted fever group pathogens

  • Yang H
  • Verhoeve V
  • Chandler C
  • et al.
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Abstract

Deforestation, urbanization, and homelessness lead to spikes in Rickettsioses. Vector-borne human pathogens of transitional group (TRG), typhus group (TG), and spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsiae differ by clinical manifestations, immunopathology, genome composition, and morphology. We previously showed that lipid A (or endotoxin), the membrane anchor of Gram-negative bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), structurally differs in Rickettsia rickettsii (later-evolving SFG) relative to Rickettsia montanensis (basal SFG), Rickettsia typhi (TG), and Rickettsia akari (TRG). As lipid A structure influences recognition potential in vertebrate LPS sensors, further assessment of Rickettsia lipid A structural heterogeneity is needed. Here, we sidestepped the difficulty of ex vivo lipid A chemical extraction by utilizing fast lipid analysis technique adopted for use with tandem mass spectrometry, a new procedure for generating lipid A structures directly from host cell-purified bacteria. These data confirm that later-evolving SFG pathogens synthesize structurally distinct lipid A. Our findings impact interpreting immune responses to different Rickettsia pathogens and utilizing lipid A adjuvant or anti-inflammatory properties in vaccinology.

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Yang, H., Verhoeve, V. I., Chandler, C. E., Nallar, S., Snyder, G. A., Ernst, R. K., & Gillespie, J. J. (2024). Structural determination of Rickettsia lipid A without chemical extraction confirms shorter acyl chains in later-evolving spotted fever group pathogens. MSphere, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00609-23

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