info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Bordetella bronchiseptica glycosyltransferase core mutants trigger changes in lipid A structure
Fecha
2019-09-16Registro en:
Casabuono, Adriana Cristina; Sisti, Federico Bernardo; Fernández, Julieta; Hozbor, Daniela Flavia; Couto, Alicia Susana; Bordetella bronchiseptica glycosyltransferase core mutants trigger changes in lipid A structure; Elsevier Science Inc.; Journal of The American Society for Mass Spectrometry; 30; 9; 16-9-2019; 1679-1689
1044-0305
1879-1123
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Casabuono, Adriana Cristina
Sisti, Federico Bernardo
Fernández, Julieta
Hozbor, Daniela Flavia
Couto, Alicia Susana
Resumen
Bordetella bronchiseptica, known to infect animals and rarely humans, expresses a lipopolysaccharide that plays an essential role in host interactions, being critical for early clearance of the bacteria. On a B. bronchiseptica 9.73 isolate, mutants defective in the expression of genes involved in the biosynthesis of the core region were previously constructed. Herein, a comparative detailed structural analysis of the expressed lipids A by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry was performed. The Bb3394 LPS defective in a 2-amino-2-deoxy-d-galacturonic acid lateral residue of the core presented a penta-acylated diglucosamine backbone modified with two glucosamine phosphates, similar to the wild-type lipid A. In contrast, BbLP39, resulting in the interruption of the LPS core oligosaccharide synthesis, presented lipid A species consisting in a diglucosamine backbone N-substituted with C14:0(3-O-C12:0) in C-2 and C14:0(3-O-C14:0) in C-2′, O-acylated with C14:0(3-O-C10:0(3-OH) in C-3′ and with a pyrophosphate in C-1. Regarding Bb3398 also presenting a rough LPS, the lipid A is formed by a hexa-acylated diglucosamine backbone carrying one pyrophosphate group in C-1 and one phosphate in C-4′, both substituted with ethanolamine groups. As far as we know, this is the first description of a phosphoethanolamine modification in B. bronchiseptica lipid A. Our results demonstrate that although gene deletions were not directed to the lipid A moiety, each mutant presented different modifications. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry was an excellent tool to highlight the structural diversity of the lipid A structures biosynthesized during its transit through the periplasm to the final localization in the outer surface of the outer membrane. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].