Pathogenic Neisseria bacteria naturally liberate outer membrane "blebs," which are presumed to contribute to pathology, and the detergent-extracted outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) from Neisseria meningitidis are currently employed as meningococcal vaccines in humans. While the composition of these vesicles reflects the bacteria from which they are derived, the functions of many of their constituent proteins remain unexplored. The neisserial colony opacity-associated Opa proteins function as adhesins, the majority of which mediate bacterial attachment to human carcinoembryonic antigen-related cellular adhesion molecules (CEACAMs). Herein, we demonstrate that the Opa proteins within OMV preparations retain the capacity to bind the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif-containing coinhibitory receptor CEACAM1. When CD4 ؉ T lymphocytes were exposed to OMVs from Opa-expressing bacteria, their activation and proliferation in response to a variety of stimuli were effectively halted. This potent immunosuppressive effect suggests that localized infection will generate a "zone of inhibition" resulting from the diffusion of membrane blebs into the surrounding tissues. Moreover, it demonstrates that OMV-based vaccines must be developed from strains that lack CEACAM1-binding Opa variants.
We sought to determine whether NMB1966, encoding a putative ABC transporter, has a role in pathogenesis. Compared to its isogenic wild-type parent strain Neisseria meningitidis MC58, the NMB1966 knockout mutant was less adhesive and invasive for human bronchial epithelial cells, had reduced survival in human blood and was attenuated in a systemic mouse model of infection. The transcriptome of the wild-type and the NMB1966 mutant was compared. The data are consistent with a previous functional assignment of NMB1966 being the ABC transporter component of a glutamate transporter operon. Forty-seven percent of all the differentially regulated genes encoded known outer membrane proteins or pathways generating complex surface structures such as adhesins, peptidoglycan and capsule. The data show that NMB1966 has a role in virulence and that remodelling of the outer membrane and surface/structures is associated with attenuation of the NMB1966 mutant.
Immunological and epidemiological evidence suggests that the development of natural immunity to meningococcal disease results from colonization of the nasopharynx by commensal Neisseria species, particularly with Neisseria lactamica. We have reported previously that immunization with N. lactamica outer-membrane vesicles containing the major OMPs (outer-membrane proteins) protected mice against lethal challenge with meningococci of diverse serogroups and serotypes and has the potential to form the basis of a vaccine against meningococcal diseases [Oliver, Reddin, Bracegirdle et al. (2002) Infect. Immun. 70, 3621-3626]. In the present study, we have shown that biomass production and the profile of outer-membrane vesicle proteins may be affected by fermentation conditions and, in particular, media composition. Ciphergen SELDI-TOF Protein Chips were used as a rapid and sensitive new method in comparison with conventional SDS/PAGE. SELDI-TOF-MS (surface-enhanced laser-desorption ionization-time-of-flight MS) reproducibly identified three major OMPs (NspA, RmpM and PorB) and detected the changes in the protein profile when the growth medium was altered. The findings of this work indicate that SELDI-TOF-MS is a useful tool for the rapid optimization of OMP production in industrial fermentation processes and can be adapted as a Process Analytical Technology.
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