2 resultados para ESTREPTOCOCO PYOGENES

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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A systematic characterization of the composition and structure of the bacterial cell-surface proteome and its complexes can provide an invaluable tool for its comprehensive understanding. The knowledge of protein complexes composition and structure could offer new, more effective targets for a more specific and consequently effective immune response against a complex instead of a single protein. Large-scale protein-protein interaction screens are the first step towards the identification of complexes and their attribution to specific pathways. Currently, several methods exist for identifying protein interactions and protein microarrays provide the most appealing alternative to existing techniques for a high throughput screening of protein-protein interactions in vitro under reasonably straightforward conditions. In this study approximately 100 proteins of Group A Streptococcus (GAS) predicted to be secreted or surface exposed by genomic and proteomic approaches were purified in a His-tagged form and used to generate protein microarrays on nitrocellulose-coated slides. To identify protein-protein interactions each purified protein was then labeled with biotin, hybridized to the microarray and interactions were detected with Cy3-labelled streptavidin. Only reciprocal interactions, i. e. binding of the same two interactors irrespective of which of the two partners is in solid-phase or in solution, were taken as bona fide protein-protein interactions. Using this approach, we have identified 20 interactors of one of the potent toxins secreted by GAS and known as superantigens. Several of these interactors belong to the molecular chaperone or protein folding catalyst families and presumably are involved in the secretion and folding of the superantigen. In addition, a very interesting interaction was found between the superantigen and the substrate binding subunit of a well characterized ABC transporter. This finding opens a new perspective on the current understanding of how superantigens are modified by the bacterial cell in order to become major players in causing disease.

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Group A Streptococcus is a Gram-positive human pathogen able to colonize both upper respiratory tract and skin. GAS is responsible for several acute diseases and autoimmune sequelae that account for half a million deaths worldwide every year (Cunningham et al., 2000). As other bacteria, GAS infections requires the capacity of the pathogen to adhere to host tissues and to form cell aggregates. The ability to persist in distinct host niches like the throat and the skin and to trigger infections is associated with the expression of different GAS virulence factors. GAS pili has been described as important virulence factors encoded by different FCT-operon regions. Based on this information, we decided to study the possible effect of environmental conditions that could regulate the pili expression. In this study we reported the influence of pH environment variations in biofilm formation for strains pertaining to a panel of different GAS FCT-types. The biofilm formation was promoted, excepted in the FCT-1 strains, by a changing in pH from physiological to acidic condition of growth in in vitro biofilm assay. By analyzing the possible association between biofilm formation and pH dependence, we have found that in FCT-2 and FCT-3 strains, the biofilm is promoted by pH reduction leading to an increase of pili expression. These data confirmed a direct link between pH dependent pilus expression and biofilm formation in GAS. As pili are a multi component structure we decided to investigate the functional role of one of its subunits, the AP-1 protein. AP-1 is highly conserved through the different FCT-types and suggests a possible essential role for the pili function. We focused our attention on the AP-1 protein encoded by the FCT-1 strains (M6). In particular this AP-1 protein contains the von Willebrand Factor A (VWFA) domain, which share an homology with the human VWFA domain that has been reported to be involved in adhesion process. We have demonstrated that the AP-1 protein binds to human epithelial cells by its VWFA domain, whereas the biofilm formation is mediated by the N-terminal region of AP-1 protein. Moreover, analyzing the importance of AP-1 in in vivo experiments we found a major capacity of tissue dissemination for the wild-type strain compared to the isogenic AP-1 deletion mutant. Pili have been also reported as potential vaccine candidates against Gram positive bacteria. For these reason we decided to investigate the relationship between cross reaction of sera raised against different GAS and GBS pilin subunits and the presence of a conserved Cna_B domain, in different pilin components. Our idea was to investigate if, using pilus conserved domains, a broad coverage vaccine against streptococcal infection could be possible.