AI Article Synopsis

  • Modern infectious disease outbreaks reveal that pathogens can adapt to specific hosts, with Lyme disease-causing bacteria serving as a key example for studying host tropism.
  • The outer surface protein CspZ helps these bacteria evade the immune system by binding to complement inhibitor factor H, with variations in CspZ affecting how well it attaches to factor H from different hosts.
  • Research revealed that minor differences in CspZ's structure can significantly influence the bacteria's ability to infect rodents versus birds, highlighting the evolutionary mechanisms behind pathogen host adaptation.

Article Abstract

Modern infectious disease outbreaks often involve changes in host tropism, the preferential adaptation of pathogens to specific hosts. The Lyme disease-causing bacterium () is an ideal model to investigate the molecular mechanisms of host tropism, because different variants of these tick-transmitted bacteria are distinctly maintained in rodents or bird reservoir hosts. To survive in hosts and escape complement-mediated immune clearance, produces the outer surface protein CspZ that binds the complement inhibitor factor H (FH) to facilitate bacterial dissemination in vertebrates. Despite high sequence conservation, CspZ variants differ in human FH-binding ability. Together with the FH polymorphisms between vertebrate hosts, these findings suggest that minor sequence variation in this bacterial outer surface protein may confer dramatic differences in host-specific, FH-binding-mediated infectivity. We tested this hypothesis by determining the crystal structure of the CspZ-human FH complex, and identifying minor variation localized in the FH-binding interface yielding bird and rodent FH-specific binding activity that impacts infectivity. Swapping the divergent region in the FH-binding interface between rodent- and bird-associated CspZ variants alters the ability to promote rodent- and bird-specific early-onset dissemination. We further linked these loops and respective host-specific, complement-dependent phenotypes with distinct CspZ phylogenetic lineages, elucidating evolutionary mechanisms driving host tropism emergence. Our multidisciplinary work provides a novel molecular basis for how a single, short protein motif could greatly modulate pathogen host tropism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10319004PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2301549120DOI Listing

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