Enolase represents one of the anchorless surface proteins of Streptococcus pneumoniae and has previously been identified as a plasminogen-binding protein, endowing this pathogen with host proteolytic activity. In this study the mAb 245,C-6 (IgG1) was produced in a BALB/c mouse after immunizing with a protein fraction from S. pneumoniae. The mAb reacted with recombinant pneumococcal enolase both under non-denaturing and denaturing conditions. The epitope for the mAb was mapped to residues 55 DKSRYGGLG 63 of pneumococcal enolase using a peptide array. By applying the previously reported structure of enolase, this epitope was localized in a surface-exposed loop in each of the monomers of the octameric enolase. Previous immunoelectron microscopic studies, using polyclonal rabbit antibodies against enolase, depicted enolase on the cell surface but did not quantify the amount of surface-exposed enolase on viable pneumococci. Here, flow cytometry revealed no binding of mAb 245,C-6 to viable pneumococci, including TIGR4 and its non-encapsulated isogenic mutant, and only a minor increase of fluorescence intensity was measured when the polyclonal anti-enolase antibodies were used. In contrast, control antibodies recognizing the choline-binding proteins (CBPs) PspA and PspC showed high reactivities. The non-encapsulated TIGR4 did not show increased levels of antibody binding for mAb 245,C-6 or polyclonal anti-enolase antibodies, but revealed increased binding of polyclonal antibodies reacting with PspA or PspC. These results suggest that, compared to other surface-exposed proteins such as CBPs, the amount of enolase under the selected conditions is low. Flow cytometry, however, with FITC-labelled plasminogen demonstrated that the amount of surface-exposed enolase is important for plasminogen binding and, therefore, is also important for pneumococcal pathogenesis. INTRODUCTIONStreptococcus pneumoniae is an important human pathogen causing a variety of diseases including pneumonia, meningitis, sepsis and otitis media. A prerequisite for invasive pneumococcal diseases (infections) is the ability of the bacteria to colonize the mucosal surface and penetrate the mucosal barriers. During these processes binding of bacterial factors such as adhesins are essential for the interactions with receptors on host cells. Among the bacterial factors that mediate direct adherence to human cells are phosphorylcholine (Cundell et al., 1995) and the choline-binding protein PspC, also known as SpsA and CbpA (Brooks-Walter et al., 1999;Hammerschmidt et al., 1997;Rosenow et al., 1997). The PspC protein binds to the secretory component of the polymeric Ig receptor or secretory IgA and this interaction mediates transmigration of pneumococci through mucosal epithelial cells (Elm et al., 2004;Zhang et al., 2000). In addition, PspC and the PspClike protein Hic have been shown to interact with complement factor H (Dave et al., 2004;Janulczyk et al., 2000). Many pathogenic bacteria also produce receptors for Abbreviations: GAPDH, glyceraldehyde-3-phos...
Pneumococcal surface protein A (PspA) is an antigenic variable vaccine candidate of Streptococcus pneumoniae. Epitope similarities between PspA from the American vaccine candidate strain Rx1 and Norwegian clinical isolates were studied using PspA specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) made against clinical Norwegian strains. Using recombinant PspA/Rx1 fragments and immunoblotting the epitopes for mAbs were mapped to two regions of amino acids, 1-67 and 67-236. The discovered epitopes were visualized by modelling of the PspA:Fab part of mAb in three dimensions. Flow cytometric analysis showed that the epitopes for majority of mAbs were accessible for antibody binding on live pneumococci. Also, the epitopes for majority of the mAbs are widely expressed among clinical Norwegian isolates.
Immunisation of BALB/c mice with seven heat-treated Norwegian clinical isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae of different serotypes elicited mainly monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to pneumococcal surface protein A (PspA). It was remarkable that the fusions resulted only in a few mAbs directed against other protein antigens. Dot blot analysis with 16 mAbs using clinical isolates representing 23 different capsular types and the uncapsulated reference strain R36A showed that some of the mAbs bound to PspA epitopes expressed by a low number of strains whereas others bound to broadly distributed epitopes. On the basis of their reactivities, seven of these mAbs could be divided into two groups recognising different subsets of pneumococci. The three mAbs in the narrow reacting group bound to epitopes found in 21-25% of the strains whereas the four mAbs in the broad reacting group detected more than 57% of the analysed strains. The epitopes for these seven antibodies were surface exposed on live exponential phase grown pneumococci as shown by flow cytometry. The finding that a combination of mAb 180,C-1 (IgG2a) from the first group and mAb 170,E-11 (IgG2a) from the second group detected 94% of the examined strains is interesting because PspA has been reported by others to be a serological highly variable protein.
Mouse monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were developed against Streptococcus pneumoniae in search for potential common pneumococcal proteins as vaccine antigens. mAb 230,B-9 (IgG1) reacted by immunoblotting with a 70-kDa protein which was isolated by immunoaffinity chromatography and subsequent preparative electrophoresis. N-terminal amino acid sequencing showed homology to that of heat shock protein 70 (hsp70). The hsp70 epitope reactive with mAb 230,B-9 was found in all the pneumococci examined as well as in other streptococci and enterococci. The epitope was not expressed in several other examined Gram-positive or -negative bacteria. Pneumococcal hsp70 has by other investigators been proposed to be a vaccine candidate. Binding experiments using flow cytometry showed that the epitope was not surface-exposed on live exponential phase grown S. pneumoniae. Human patient sera did not react with affinity-purified pneumococcal hsp70. Therefore the pneumococcal hsp70 does not seem to be of special interest in a vaccine formulation. The human sera contained antibodies to high molecular proteins co-purified with hsp70. Some of these proteins could be the pneumococcal surface protein A.
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