Article
Major surface protein LipL32 is not required for either acute or chronic infection with Leptospira interrogans.
Registro en:
MURRAY, G. L. et al. Major surface protein LipL32 is not required for either acute or chronic infection with Leptospira interrogans. Infection and Immunity, v. 77, n. 3, p. 952-958, 2009.
1098-5522
10.1128/IAI.01370-08
Autor
Murray, Gerald L
Srikram, Amporn
Hoke, David E
Wunder Junior, Elsio Augusto
Henry, Rebekah
Lo, Miranda
Zhang, Kunkun
Sermswan, Rasana W
Ko, Albert Icksang
Adler, Ben
Resumen
Leptospira interrogans is responsible for leptospirosis, a zoonosis of worldwide distribution. LipL32 is the
major outer membrane protein of pathogenic leptospires, accounting for up to 75% of total outer membrane
protein. In recent times LipL32 has become the focus of intense study because of its surface location,
dominance in the host immune response, and conservation among pathogenic species. In this study, an lipL32
mutant was constructed in L. interrogans using transposon mutagenesis. The lipL32 mutant had normal
morphology and growth rate compared to the wild type and was equally adherent to extracellular matrix.
Protein composition of the cell membranes was found to be largely unaffected by the loss of LipL32, with no
obvious compensatory increase in other proteins. Microarray studies found no obvious stress response or
upregulation of genes that may compensate for the loss of LipL32 but did suggest an association between
LipL32 and the synthesis of heme and vitamin B12. When hamsters were inoculated by systemic and mucosal
routes, the mutant caused acute severe disease manifestations that were indistinguishable from wild-type L.
interrogans infection. In the rat model of chronic infection, the LipL32 mutant colonized the renal tubules as
efficiently as the wild-type strain. In conclusion, this study showed that LipL32 does not play a role in either
the acute or chronic models of infection. Considering the abundance and conservation of LipL32 among all
pathogenic Leptospira spp. and its absence in saprophytic Leptospira, this finding is remarkable. The role of this
protein in leptospiral biology and pathogenesis thus remains elusive.