AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focuses on the role of protein methylation in the behavior of the heparin binding hemagglutinin (HbhA) from bacteria, suggesting it could serve as a candidate for a subunit vaccine due to altered immune response.
  • - Researchers expressed HbhA as a recombinant methylated protein and examined its behavior under nitrogen-limiting conditions, discovering that methylation affects the protein's stability but not its interaction with certain cells.
  • - The findings indicate that HbhA acts as a Fatty Acid Binding Protein, hinting at its potential role in lipid body formation related to tuberculosis and emphasizing the need for specialized expression systems to study modified proteins effectively.

Article Abstract

In recent years, knowledge of the role that protein methylation is playing on the physiopathogenesis of bacteria has grown. In , methylation of the heparin binding hemagglutinin adhesin modulates the immune response, making this protein a subunit vaccine candidate. Through its C-terminal lysine-rich domain, this surface antigen interacts with heparan sulfate proteoglycans present in non-phagocytic cells, leading to extrapulmonary dissemination of the pathogen. In this study, the adhesin was expressed as a recombinant methylated protein in L88 and it was found associated to lipid droplets when bacteria were grown under nitrogen limitation. In order to delve into the role methylation could have in host-pathogen interactions, a comparative analysis was carried out between methylated and unmethylated protein produced in . We found that methylation had an impact on lowering protein isoelectric point, but no differences between the proteins were found in their capacity to interact with heparin and A549 epithelial cells. An important finding was that HbhA is a Fatty Acid Binding Protein and differences in the conformational stability of the protein in complex with the fatty acid were observed between methylated and unmethylated protein. Together, these results suggest that the described role for this mycobacteria protein in lipid bodies formation could be related to its capacity to transport fatty acids. Obtained results also provide new clues about the role HbhA methylation could have in tuberculosis and point out the importance of having heterologous expression systems to obtain modified proteins.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8467707PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10091139DOI Listing

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