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1.
Mol Microbiol ; 81(6): 1542-59, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21801240

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate that disruption of the htrA (high temperature requirement A) gene in either the virulent Bacillus anthracis Vollum (pXO1(+) , pXO2(+) ), or in the ΔVollum (pXO1(-), pXO2(-), nontoxinogenic and noncapsular) strains, affect significantly the ability of the resulting mutants to withstand heat, oxidative, ethanol and osmotic stress. The ΔhtrA mutants manifest altered secretion of several proteins, as well as complete silencing of the abundant extracellular starvation-associated neutral protease A (NprA). VollumΔhtrA bacteria exhibit delayed proliferation in a macrophage infection assay, and despite their ability to synthesize the major B. anthracis toxins LT (lethal toxin) and ET (oedema toxin) as well as the capsule, show a decrease of over six orders of magnitude in virulence (lethal dose 50% = 3 × 10(8) spores, in the guinea pig model of anthrax), as compared with the parental wild-type strain. This unprecedented extent of loss of virulence in B. anthracis, as a consequence of deletion of a single gene, as well as all other phenotypic defects associated with htrA mutation, are restored in their corresponding trans-complemented strains. It is suggested that the loss of virulence is due to increased susceptibility of the ΔhtrA bacteria to stress insults encountered in the host. On a practical note, it is demonstrated that the attenuated Vollum ΔhtrA is highly efficacious in protecting guinea pigs against a lethal anthrax challenge.


Subject(s)
Bacillus anthracis/physiology , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Serine Endopeptidases/metabolism , Stress, Physiological , Virulence Factors/metabolism , Animals , Anthrax/microbiology , Anthrax/pathology , Antigens, Bacterial/metabolism , Bacillus anthracis/drug effects , Bacillus anthracis/genetics , Bacillus anthracis/radiation effects , Bacterial Capsules/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Toxins/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional , Ethanol/toxicity , Gene Knockout Techniques , Genetic Complementation Test , Guinea Pigs , Hot Temperature , Macrophages/microbiology , Microbial Viability/drug effects , Microbial Viability/radiation effects , Osmotic Pressure , Oxidative Stress , Proteome/analysis , Serine Endopeptidases/genetics , Survival Analysis , Virulence , Virulence Factors/genetics
2.
Infect Immun ; 75(6): 2841-52, 2007 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17353282

ABSTRACT

In a previous comparative proteomic study of Bacillus anthracis examining the influence of the virulence plasmids and of various growth conditions on the composition of the bacterial secretome, we identified 64 abundantly expressed proteins (T. Chitlaru, O. Gat, Y. Gozlan, N. Ariel, and A. Shafferman, J. Bacteriol. 188:3551-3571, 2006). Using a battery of sera from B. anthracis-infected animals, in the present study we demonstrated that 49 of these proteins are immunogenic. Thirty-eight B. anthracis immunogens are documented in this study for the first time. The relative immunogenicities of the 49 secreted proteins appear to span a >10,000-fold range. The proteins eliciting the highest humoral response in the course of infection include, in addition to the well-established immunogens protective antigen (PA), Sap, and EA1, GroEL (BA0267), AhpC (BA0345), MntA (BA3189), HtrA (BA3660), 2,3-cyclic nucleotide diesterase (BA4346), collagen adhesin (BAS5205), an alanine amidase (BA0898), and an endopeptidase (BA1952), as well as three proteins having unknown functions (BA0796, BA0799, and BA0307). Of these 14 highly potent secreted immunogens, 11 are known to be associated with virulence and pathogenicity in B. anthracis or in other bacterial pathogens. Combining the results reported here with the results of a similar study of the membranal proteome of B. anthracis (T. Chitlaru, N. Ariel, A. Zvi, M. Lion, B. Velan, A. Shafferman, and E. Elhanany, Proteomics 4:677-691, 2004) and the results obtained in a functional genomic search for immunogens (O. Gat, H. Grosfeld, N. Ariel, I. Inbar, G. Zaide, Y. Broder, A. Zvi, T. Chitlaru, Z. Altboum, D. Stein, S. Cohen, and A. Shafferman, Infect. Immun. 74:3987-4001, 2006), we generated a list of 84 in vivo-expressed immunogens for future evaluation for vaccine development, diagnostics, and/or therapeutic intervention. In a preliminary study, the efficacies of eight immunogens following DNA immunization of guinea pigs were compared to the efficacy of a PA DNA vaccine. All eight immunogens induced specific high antibody titers comparable to the titers elicited by PA; however, unlike PA, none of them provided protection against a lethal challenge (50 50% lethal doses) of virulent B. anthracis strain Vollum spores.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Bacterial/isolation & purification , Bacillus anthracis/chemistry , Proteome/isolation & purification , Animals , Antigens, Bacterial/metabolism , Guinea Pigs , Proteome/analysis , Proteome/immunology , Proteome/metabolism , Serologic Tests
3.
Infect Immun ; 74(7): 3987-4001, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16790772

ABSTRACT

Bacillus anthracis proteins that possess antigenic properties and are able to evoke an immune response were identified by a reductive genomic-serologic screen of a set of in silico-preselected open reading frames (ORFs). The screen included in vitro expression of the selected ORFs by coupled transcription and translation of linear PCR-generated DNA fragments, followed by immunoprecipitation with antisera from B. anthracis-infected animals. Of the 197 selected ORFs, 161 were chromosomal and 36 were on plasmids pXO1 and pXO2, and 138 of the 197 ORFs had putative functional annotations (known ORFs) and 59 had no assigned functions (unknown ORFs). A total of 129 of the known ORFs (93%) could be expressed, whereas only 38 (64%) of the unknown ORFs were successfully expressed. All 167 expressed polypeptides were subjected to immunoprecipitation with the anti-B. anthracis antisera, which revealed 52 seroreactive immunogens, only 1 of which was encoded by an unknown ORF. The high percentage of seroreactive ORFs among the functionally annotated ORFs (37%; 51/129) attests to the predictive value of the bioinformatic strategy used for vaccine candidate selection. Furthermore, the experimental findings suggest that surface-anchored proteins and adhesins or transporters, such as cell wall hydrolases, proteins involved in iron acquisition, and amino acid and oligopeptide transporters, have great potential to be immunogenic. Most of the seroreactive ORFs that were tested as DNA vaccines indeed appeared to induce a humoral response in mice. We list more than 30 novel B. anthracis immunoreactive virulence-related proteins which could be useful in diagnosis, pathogenesis studies, and future anthrax vaccine development.


Subject(s)
Anthrax Vaccines/genetics , Anthrax Vaccines/immunology , Anthrax/microbiology , Bacillus anthracis/immunology , Genome, Bacterial/immunology , Genomics , Open Reading Frames/immunology , Vaccines, DNA/immunology , Animals , Anthrax/immunology , Anthrax/prevention & control , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Antigens, Bacterial/immunology , Antigens, Bacterial/physiology , Bacillus anthracis/genetics , Chromosomes, Bacterial/genetics , Chromosomes, Bacterial/immunology , Computational Biology/methods , Guinea Pigs , Immune Sera/blood , Immune Sera/genetics , Mice , Mice, Inbred ICR , Open Reading Frames/genetics , Open Reading Frames/physiology , Rabbits , Vaccines, DNA/genetics
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