Abstract
Haemophilus influenzae protein E (PE) is a 16kDa adhesin that induces a pro-inflammatory immune response in lung epithelial cells. The active epithelial binding region comprising amino acids PE 84-108 also interferes with complement-mediated bacterial killing by capturing vitronectin (Vn) that prevents complement deposition and formation of the membrane attack complex (MAC). Here, the interaction between PE and Vn was characterized using site-directed mutagenesis. Protein E variants were produced both in soluble forms and in surface-expressed molecules on Escherichia coli. Mutations within PE84-108 in the full-length molecule revealed that K85 and R86 residues were important for the Vn binding. Bactericidal activity against H. influenzae was higher in human serum pre-treated with full-length PE as compared with serum incubated with PEK85E, R86D, suggesting that PE quenched Vn. A series of truncated Vn molecules revealed that the C-terminal domain comprising Vn353-363 harboured the major binding region for PE. Interestingly, MAC deposition was significantly higher on mutants devoid of PE due to a decreased Vn-binding capacity when compared with wild-type H. influenzae. Our results define a fine-tuned interaction between H. influenzae and the innate immune system, and identify the mode of control of the MAC that is important for pathogen complement evasion. © 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Singh, B., Jalalvand, F., Mörgelin, M., Zipfel, P., Blom, A. M., & Riesbeck, K. (2011). Haemophilus influenzae protein E recognizes the C-terminal domain of vitronectin and modulates the membrane attack complex. Molecular Microbiology, 81(1), 80–98. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2011.07678.x
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