Bacterial surface capsular polysaccharides (CPS) that are similar in carbohydrate sequence may differ markedly in immunogenicity and antigenicity. The structural origin of these phenomena is poorly understood. Such a case is presented by the Gram-positive bacteria Streptococcus agalactiae (Group B Streptococcus; GBS) type III (GBSIII) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (Pn) type 14 (Pn14), which share closely related CPS sequences. Nevertheless, antibodies (Abs) against GBSIII rarely cross-react with the CPS from Pn14. To establish the origin for the variation in CPS antigenicity, models for the immune complexes of CPS fragments from GBSIII and Pn14, with the variable fragment (Fv) of a GBS-specific mAb (mAb 1B1), are presented. The complexes are generated through a combination of comparative Ab modeling and automated ligand docking, followed by explicitly solvated 10-ns molecular dynamics simulations. The relationship between carbohydrate sequence and antigenicity is further quantified through the computation of interaction energies using the Molecular Mechanics-Generalized Born Surface Area (MM-GBSA) method, augmented by conformational entropy estimates. Despite the electrostatic differences between Pn14 and GBSIII CPS, analysis indicates that entropic penalties are primarily responsible for the loss of affinity of the highly flexible Pn14 CPS for mAb 1B1. The similarity of the solution conformation of the relatively rigid GBSIII CPS with that in the immune complex characterizes the previously undescribed 3D structure of the conformational epitope. The analysis provides a comprehensive interpretation for a large body of biochemical and immunological data related to Ab recognition of bacterial polysaccharides and should be applicable to other Ab-carbohydrate interactions.
S treptococcus agalactiae [Group B Streptococcus (GBS)] andStreptococcus pneumoniae (Pn) are responsible for the majority of life-threatening cases of septicemia, meningitis, and pneumonia in neonates (1, 2). Gram-positive bacteria, such as GBS and Pn, are classified into serotypes according to the unique carbohydrate sequence of the bacterial surface capsular polysaccharide (CPS) and protein antigens. Serotypes vary in antigenicity, immunogenicity, virulence, and geographical distribution (3). Quantification of the structural and dynamic properties responsible for the affinity and specificity of antigenic oligosaccharide-antibody (Ab) interactions is a crucial step in furthering the understanding of the immune response to bacterial and fungal pathogens. In GBS, the CPS is a high-molecularweight polymer composed of varying sequences of -D-, and sometimes L-rhamnopyranose. The glyceryl side chain of the Neu5Ac residues may also be Oacetylated (4). In all GBS strains identified to date, the Neu5Ac residues occur in the terminal position on the side-chain branches of the polymeric repeat unit of the CPS. They play an important role in defining the antigenicity and immunogenicity of the CPS (5). Variations within the CPS sequence result in the nine kno...