, responsible for the sexually transmitted infection gonorrhea, is an obligate human pathogen exquisitely adapted for survival on mucosal surfaces of humans. This host-pathogen relationship has resulted in evolution by of pathways that enable the use of host metalloproteins as required nutrients through the deployment of outer membrane-bound TonB-dependent transporters (TdTs). Recently, a TdT called TdfH was implicated in binding to calprotectin (CP) and in removal of the bound zinc (Zn), enabling gonococcal growth. TdfH is highly conserved among the pathogenic species, making it a potentially promising candidate for inclusion into a gonococcal vaccine. Currently, the nature and specificity of the TdfH-CP interaction have not been determined. In this study, we found that TdfH specifically interacted with human calprotectin (hCP) and that growth of the gonococcus was supported in a TdfH-dependent manner only when hCP was available as a sole zinc source and not when mouse CP was provided. The binding interactions between TdfH and hCP were assessed using isothermal titration calorimetry where we observed a multistate model having both high-affinity and low-affinity sites of interaction. hCP has two Zn binding sites, and gonococcal growth assays using hCP mutants deficient in one or both of the Zn binding sites revealed that TdfH exhibited a site preference during Zn piracy and utilization. This report provides the first insights into the molecular mechanism of Zn piracy by neisserial TdfH and further highlights the obligate human nature of and the high-affinity interactions occurring between TdTs and their human ligands during pathogenesis. The dramatic rise in antimicrobial resistance among isolates over the last few decades, paired with dwindling treatment options and the lack of a protective vaccine, has prompted increased interest in identifying new bacterial targets for the treatment and, ideally, prevention of gonococcal disease. TonB-dependent transporters are a conserved set of proteins that serve crucial functions for bacterial survival within the host. In this study, binding between the gonococcal transporter, TdfH, and calprotectin was determined to be of high affinity and host restricted. The current study identified a preferential TdfH interaction at the calprotectin dimer interface. An antigonococcal therapeutic could potentially block this site on calprotectin, interrupting Zn uptake by and thereby prohibiting continued bacterial growth. We describe protein-protein interactions between TdfH and calprotectin, and our findings provide the building blocks for future therapeutic or prophylactic targets.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00949-20 | DOI Listing |
Infect Immun
March 2022
University of Virginiagrid.27755.32, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae (Gc) must overcome the limitation of metals such as zinc to colonize mucosal surfaces in its obligate human host. While the zinc-binding nutritional immunity proteins calprotectin (S100A8/A9) and psoriasin (S100A7) are abundant in human cervicovaginal lavage fluid, Gc possesses TonB-dependent transporters TdfH and TdfJ that bind and extract zinc from the human version of these proteins, respectively. Here we investigated the contribution of zinc acquisition to Gc infection of epithelial cells of the female genital tract.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Biol
January 2022
Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA.
To combat nutritional immunity, N. gonorrhoeae has evolved systems to hijack zinc and other metals directly from host metal-binding proteins such as calprotectin (CP). Here, we report the 6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanomaterials (Basel)
August 2021
Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
Liquid perfluorocarbon-based nanodroplets are stable enough to be used in extravascular imaging, but provide limited contrast enhancement due to their small size, incompressible core, and small acoustic impedance mismatch with biological fluids. Here we show a novel approach to overcoming this limitation by using a heating-cooling cycle, which we will refer to as thermal modulation (TM), to induce echogenicity of otherwise stable but poorly echogenic nanodroplets without triggering a transient phase shift. We apply thermal modulation to high-boiling point tetradecafluorohexane (TDFH) nanodroplets stabilized with a bovine serum albumin (BSA) shell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmBio
May 2020
Center for Translational Immunology, Institute for Biomedical Sciences, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
, responsible for the sexually transmitted infection gonorrhea, is an obligate human pathogen exquisitely adapted for survival on mucosal surfaces of humans. This host-pathogen relationship has resulted in evolution by of pathways that enable the use of host metalloproteins as required nutrients through the deployment of outer membrane-bound TonB-dependent transporters (TdTs). Recently, a TdT called TdfH was implicated in binding to calprotectin (CP) and in removal of the bound zinc (Zn), enabling gonococcal growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Pathog
August 2019
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, Richmond, VA, United States of America.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae causes the sexually-transmitted infection gonorrhea, a global disease that is difficult to treat and for which there is no vaccine. This pathogen employs an arsenal of conserved outer membrane proteins called TonB-dependent transporters (TdTs) that allow the gonococcus to overcome nutritional immunity, the host strategy of sequestering essential nutrients away from invading bacteria to handicap infectious ability. N.
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