Affiliation:
1. Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hospital Epidemiology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany
2. German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Hannover, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Helicobacter pylori
undergoes rapid microevolution during chronic infection, but very little is known about how this affects host interaction factors. The best-studied adhesin of
H. pylori
is BabA, which mediates binding to the blood group antigen Lewis b [Le(b)]. To study the dynamics of Le(b) adherence during human infection, we analyzed paired
H. pylori
isolates obtained sequentially from chronically infected individuals. A complete loss or significant reduction of Le(b) binding was observed in strains from 5 out of 23 individuals, indicating that the Le(b) binding phenotype is quite stable during chronic human infection. Sequence comparisons of
babA
identified differences due to mutation and/or recombination in 12 out of 16 strain pairs analyzed. Most amino acid changes were found in the putative N-terminal extracellular adhesion domain. One strain pair that had changed from a Le(b) binding to a nonbinding phenotype was used to study the role of distinct sequence changes in Le(b) binding. By transformations of the nonbinding strain with a
babA
gene amplified from the binding strain,
H. pylori
strains with mosaic
babA
genes were generated. Recombinants were enriched for a gain of Le(b) binding by biopanning or for BabA expression on the bacterial surface by pulldown assay. With this approach, we identified several amino acid residues affecting the strength of Le(b) binding. Additionally, the data showed that the C terminus of BabA, which is predicted to encode an outer membrane β-barrel domain, plays an essential role in the biogenesis of this protein.
IMPORTANCE
Helicobacter pylori
causes a chronic infection of the human stomach that can lead to ulcers and cancer. The bacterium can bind to gastric epithelial cells with specialized outer membrane proteins. The best-studied protein is the BabA adhesin which binds to the Lewis b blood group antigen. Since
H. pylori
is a bacterium with very high genetic variability, we asked whether
babA
evolves during chronic infection and how mutations or recombination in
babA
affect binding. We found that BabA-mediated adherence was stable in most individuals but observed a complete loss of binding or reduced binding in 22% of individuals. One strain pair in which binding was lost was used to generate
babA
sequences that were mosaics of a functional allele and a nonfunctional allele, and the mosaic sequences were used to identify amino acids critically involved in binding of BabA to Lewis b.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
43 articles.
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