Affiliation:
1. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine,1
2. Center for the Study of Emerging and Re-emerging Pathogens,2 and
3. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics,3University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas 77030
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Our previous work reported that most
Enterococcus faecalis
strains adhered to the extracellular matrix proteins collagen types I and IV and laminin after growth at 46°C, but not 37°C, and we subsequently identified an
E. faecalis
sequence,
ace
, that encodes a bacterial adhesin similar to the collagen binding protein Cna of
Staphylococcus aureus
. In this study, we examined the diversity of
E. faecalis
-specific
ace
gene sequences among different isolates obtained from various geographic regions as well as from various clinical sources. A comparison of nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of Ace from nine
E. faecalis
strains identified a highly conserved N-terminal A domain, followed by a variable B domain which contains two to five repeats of 47 amino acids in tandem array, preceded by a 20-amino-acid partial repeat. Using 17 other strains collected worldwide, the 5′ region of
ace
that encodes the A domain was sequenced, and these sequences showed ≥97.5% identity. Among the previously reported five amino acids critical for collagen binding by Cna of
S. aureus
, four were found to be identical in Ace from all strains tested. Polyclonal immune rabbit serum prepared against recombinant Ace A derived from
E. faecalis
strain OG1RF detected Ace in mutanolysin extracts of seven of nine
E. faecalis
strains after growth at 46°C; Ace was detected in four different molecular sizes that correspond to the variation in the B repeat region. To determine if there was any evidence to indicate that Ace might be produced under physiological conditions, we quantitatively assayed sera collected from patients with enterococcal infections for the presence of anti-Ace A antibodies. Ninety percent of sera (19 of 21) from patients with
E. faecalis
endocarditis showed reactivity with titers from 1:32 to >1:1,024; the only 2 sera which lacked antibodies to Ace A had considerably lower titers of antibodies to other
E. faecalis
antigens as well. Human-derived, anti-Ace A immunoglobulins G purified from an
E. faecalis
endocarditis patient serum inhibited adherence of 46°C-grown
E. faecalis
OG1RF to collagen types I and IV and laminin. In conclusion, these results show that
ace
is highly conserved among isolates of
E. faecalis
, with at least four variants related to the differences in the B domain, is expressed by different strains during infection in humans, and human-derived antibodies can block adherence to these extracellular matrix proteins.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
98 articles.
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