Structural basis of tropism of Escherichia coli to the bladder during urinary tract infection

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Abstract

The first step in the colonization of the human urinary tract by pathogenic Escherichia coli is the mannosesensitive binding of FimH, the adhesin present at the tip of type 1 pili, to the bladder epithelium. We elucidated crystallographically the interactions of FimH with D-mannose. The unique site binding pocket occupied by D-mannose was probed using site-directed mutagenesis. All but one of the mutants examined had greatly diminished mannose-binding activity and had also lost the ability to bind human bladder cells. The binding activity of the monosaccharide D-mannose was delineated from this of mannotriose (Man(α1-3)[Man(α1-6)]Man) by generating mutants that abolished D-mannose binding but retained mannotriose binding activity. Our structure/function analysis demonstrated that the binding of the monosaccharide α-D-mannose is the primary bladder cell receptor for uropathogenic E. coli and that this event requires a highly conserved FimH binding pocket. The residues in the FimH mannose-binding pocket were sequenced and found to be invariant in over 200 uropathogenic strains of E. coli. Only enterohaemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) possess a sequence variation within the mannose-binding pocket of FimH, suggesting a naturally occurring mechanism of attenuation in EHEC bacteria that would prevent them from being targeted to the urinary tract.

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Hung, C. S., Bouckaert, J., Hung, D., Pinkner, J., Widberg, C., DeFusco, A., … Hultgren, S. J. (2002). Structural basis of tropism of Escherichia coli to the bladder during urinary tract infection. Molecular Microbiology, 44(4), 903–915. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2958.2002.02915.x

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