Some strains of Streptococcus pyogenes secrete a virulence factor called the streptococcal inhibitor of complement (SIC) function. SIC is a polyfunctional protein that interacts with a number of host proteins and peptides, especially with those that are involved in host defense systems. In addition to inhibiting the complement-mediated lysis of cells, SIC inhibits lysozyme, secretory leukocyte proteinase inhibitor, and beta-defensins. SIC also binds to proteins associated with the cytoskeleton and thereby may cause cytoskeletal derangement. The SIC molecule has three distinct structural domains constituting the N-proximal short repeat region (SRR), the central long repeat region (LRR), and the C-proximal proline-rich region (PRR). To map various functions to the structural domains, we have analyzed recombinant subclones expressing various parts of SIC and elastase-generated discrete fragments of SIC for binding to various ligands and for determining their biological properties. The results demonstrate the following. (a) SRR alone was sufficient to confer inhibition of complement function. (b) Anti-defensin and anti-lysozyme activities were mapped to the SRR plus LRR. (c) The LRR plus PRR harbored ezrin binding activity.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M414194200DOI Listing

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