AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on the fibronectin-binding protein A (FnBPA), which is vital for bacterial adherence to human tissues and plays a role in disease severity.
  • Researchers identified five different isotypes of FnBPA A domain in clinical samples from patients with bacteremia and measured their immune response via IgG levels.
  • Despite observing some IgG production against FnBPA, significant increases were noted in only 14% of patients, highlighting gaps in understanding how sequence diversity in this protein affects human antibody responses during infections.

Article Abstract

The fibronectin-binding protein A (FnBPA) is a cell surface-associated protein of which mediates adherence to the host extracellular matrix and is important for bacterial virulence. Previously, substantial sequence diversity was found among strains in the fibrinogen-binding A domain of this protein, and 7 different isotypes were described. The effect of this sequence diversity on the human antibody response, in terms of both antibody production and antibody function, remains unclear. In this study, we identify five different FnBPA A domain isotypes based on the sequence results of 22 clinical isolates, obtained from the same number of patients suffering from bacteremia. Using a bead-based Luminex technique, we measure the patients' total immunoglobulin G (IgG) against the 7 FnBPA isotypes at the onset and during the time course of bacteremia (median of 10 serum samples per patient over a median of 35 days). A significant increase in IgG against the FnBPA A domain, including the isotype carried by the infecting strain, is observed in only three out of 22 patients (14%) after the onset of bacteremia. Using a Luminex-based FnBPA-fibrinogen-binding assay, we find that preincubation of recombinant FnBPA isotypes with IgG from diverse patients does not interfere with binding to fibrinogen. This observation is confirmed using an alternative Luminex-based assay and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Despite the many and murine studies involving FnBPA, the actual presence of this virulence factor during human infection is less well established. Furthermore, it is currently unknown to what extent sequence variation in such a virulence factor affects the human antibody response and the ability of antibodies to interfere with FnBPA function. This study sheds new light on these issues. First, the uniform presence of a patient's IgG against FnBPA indicates the presence and importance of this virulence factor during pathogenesis. Second, the absence of an increase in antibody production in most patients following bacteremia indicates the complexity of -host interactions, possibly involving immune evasion or lack of expression of FnBPA during invasive infection. Finally, we provide new insights into the inability of human antibodies to interfere with FnBPA-fibrinogen binding. These observations should be taken into account during the development of novel vaccination approaches.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5853482PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00590-17DOI Listing

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