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Some Gram-negative Lipoproteins Keep Their Surface Topology When Transplanted from One Species to Another and Deliver Foreign Polypeptides to the Bacterial Surface

In Gram-negative bacteria, outer membrane-associated lipoproteins can either face the periplasm or protrude out of the bacterial surface. The mechanisms involved in lipoprotein transport through the outer membrane are not fully elucidated. Some lipoproteins reach the surface by using species-specifi...

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Autores principales: Fantappiè, Laura, Irene, Carmela, De Santis, Micaela, Armini, Alessandro, Gagliardi, Assunta, Tomasi, Michele, Parri, Matteo, Cafardi, Valeria, Bonomi, Serena, Ganfini, Luisa, Zerbini, Francesca, Zanella, Ilaria, Carnemolla, Chiara, Bini, Luca, Grandi, Alberto, Grandi, Guido
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5500766/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28483926
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M116.065094
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author Fantappiè, Laura
Irene, Carmela
De Santis, Micaela
Armini, Alessandro
Gagliardi, Assunta
Tomasi, Michele
Parri, Matteo
Cafardi, Valeria
Bonomi, Serena
Ganfini, Luisa
Zerbini, Francesca
Zanella, Ilaria
Carnemolla, Chiara
Bini, Luca
Grandi, Alberto
Grandi, Guido
author_facet Fantappiè, Laura
Irene, Carmela
De Santis, Micaela
Armini, Alessandro
Gagliardi, Assunta
Tomasi, Michele
Parri, Matteo
Cafardi, Valeria
Bonomi, Serena
Ganfini, Luisa
Zerbini, Francesca
Zanella, Ilaria
Carnemolla, Chiara
Bini, Luca
Grandi, Alberto
Grandi, Guido
author_sort Fantappiè, Laura
collection PubMed
description In Gram-negative bacteria, outer membrane-associated lipoproteins can either face the periplasm or protrude out of the bacterial surface. The mechanisms involved in lipoprotein transport through the outer membrane are not fully elucidated. Some lipoproteins reach the surface by using species-specific transport machinery. By contrast, a still poorly characterized group of lipoproteins appears to always cross the outer membrane, even when transplanted from one organism to another. To investigate such lipoproteins, we tested the expression and compartmentalization in E. coli of three surface-exposed lipoproteins, two from Neisseria meningitidis (Nm-fHbp and NHBA) and one from Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (Aa-fHbp). We found that all three lipoproteins were lipidated and compartmentalized in the E. coli outer membrane and in outer membrane vesicles. Furthermore, fluorescent antibody cell sorting analysis, proteolytic surface shaving, and confocal microscopy revealed that all three proteins were also exposed on the surface of the outer membrane. Removal or substitution of the first four amino acids following the lipidated cysteine residue and extensive deletions of the C-terminal regions in Nm-fHbp did not prevent the protein from reaching the surface of the outer membrane. Heterologous polypeptides, fused to the C termini of Nm-fHbp and NHBA, were efficiently transported to the E. coli cell surface and compartmentalized in outer membrane vesicles, demonstrating that these lipoproteins can be exploited in biotechnological applications requiring Gram-negative bacterial surface display of foreign polypeptides.
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spelling pubmed-55007662017-07-07 Some Gram-negative Lipoproteins Keep Their Surface Topology When Transplanted from One Species to Another and Deliver Foreign Polypeptides to the Bacterial Surface Fantappiè, Laura Irene, Carmela De Santis, Micaela Armini, Alessandro Gagliardi, Assunta Tomasi, Michele Parri, Matteo Cafardi, Valeria Bonomi, Serena Ganfini, Luisa Zerbini, Francesca Zanella, Ilaria Carnemolla, Chiara Bini, Luca Grandi, Alberto Grandi, Guido Mol Cell Proteomics Research In Gram-negative bacteria, outer membrane-associated lipoproteins can either face the periplasm or protrude out of the bacterial surface. The mechanisms involved in lipoprotein transport through the outer membrane are not fully elucidated. Some lipoproteins reach the surface by using species-specific transport machinery. By contrast, a still poorly characterized group of lipoproteins appears to always cross the outer membrane, even when transplanted from one organism to another. To investigate such lipoproteins, we tested the expression and compartmentalization in E. coli of three surface-exposed lipoproteins, two from Neisseria meningitidis (Nm-fHbp and NHBA) and one from Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (Aa-fHbp). We found that all three lipoproteins were lipidated and compartmentalized in the E. coli outer membrane and in outer membrane vesicles. Furthermore, fluorescent antibody cell sorting analysis, proteolytic surface shaving, and confocal microscopy revealed that all three proteins were also exposed on the surface of the outer membrane. Removal or substitution of the first four amino acids following the lipidated cysteine residue and extensive deletions of the C-terminal regions in Nm-fHbp did not prevent the protein from reaching the surface of the outer membrane. Heterologous polypeptides, fused to the C termini of Nm-fHbp and NHBA, were efficiently transported to the E. coli cell surface and compartmentalized in outer membrane vesicles, demonstrating that these lipoproteins can be exploited in biotechnological applications requiring Gram-negative bacterial surface display of foreign polypeptides. The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2017-07 2017-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5500766/ /pubmed/28483926 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M116.065094 Text en © 2017 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version free via Creative Commons CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) .
spellingShingle Research
Fantappiè, Laura
Irene, Carmela
De Santis, Micaela
Armini, Alessandro
Gagliardi, Assunta
Tomasi, Michele
Parri, Matteo
Cafardi, Valeria
Bonomi, Serena
Ganfini, Luisa
Zerbini, Francesca
Zanella, Ilaria
Carnemolla, Chiara
Bini, Luca
Grandi, Alberto
Grandi, Guido
Some Gram-negative Lipoproteins Keep Their Surface Topology When Transplanted from One Species to Another and Deliver Foreign Polypeptides to the Bacterial Surface
title Some Gram-negative Lipoproteins Keep Their Surface Topology When Transplanted from One Species to Another and Deliver Foreign Polypeptides to the Bacterial Surface
title_full Some Gram-negative Lipoproteins Keep Their Surface Topology When Transplanted from One Species to Another and Deliver Foreign Polypeptides to the Bacterial Surface
title_fullStr Some Gram-negative Lipoproteins Keep Their Surface Topology When Transplanted from One Species to Another and Deliver Foreign Polypeptides to the Bacterial Surface
title_full_unstemmed Some Gram-negative Lipoproteins Keep Their Surface Topology When Transplanted from One Species to Another and Deliver Foreign Polypeptides to the Bacterial Surface
title_short Some Gram-negative Lipoproteins Keep Their Surface Topology When Transplanted from One Species to Another and Deliver Foreign Polypeptides to the Bacterial Surface
title_sort some gram-negative lipoproteins keep their surface topology when transplanted from one species to another and deliver foreign polypeptides to the bacterial surface
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5500766/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28483926
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M116.065094
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