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RrgA is a pilus‐associated adhesin in Streptococcus pneumoniae
Author(s) -
Nelson A. L.,
Ries J.,
Bagnoli F.,
Dahlberg S.,
Fälker S.,
Rounioja S.,
Tschöp J.,
Morfeldt E.,
Ferlenghi I.,
Hilleringmann M.,
Holden D. W.,
Rappuoli R.,
Normark S.,
Barocchi M. A.,
HenriquesNormark B.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
molecular microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.857
H-Index - 247
eISSN - 1365-2958
pISSN - 0950-382X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2007.05908.x
Subject(s) - pilus , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , bacterial adhesin , streptococcus pneumoniae , fimbria , bacteria , biofilm , fimbriae proteins , protein subunit , agglutination (biology) , recombinant dna , escherichia coli , gene , antibody , immunology , genetics , antibiotics
Summary Adherence to host cells is important in microbial colonization of a mucosal surface, and Streptococcus pneumoniae adherence was significantly enhanced by expression of an extracellular pilus composed of three subunits, RrgA, RrgB and RrgC. We sought to determine which subunit(s) confers adherence. Bacteria deficient in RrgA are significantly less adherent than wild‐type organisms, while overexpression of RrgA enhances adherence. Recombinant monomeric RrgA binds to respiratory cells, as does RrgC with less affinity, and pre‐incubation of epithelial cells with RrgA reduces adherence of wild‐type piliated pneumococci. Non‐adherent RrgA‐negative, RrgB‐ and RrgC‐positive organisms produce pili, suggesting that pilus‐mediated adherence is due to expression of RrgA, rather than the pilus backbone itself. In contrast, RrgA‐positive strains with disrupted rrgB and rrgC genes exhibit wild‐type adherence despite failure to produce pili by Western blot or immunoelectron microscopy. The density of bacteria colonizing the upper respiratory tract of mice inoculated with piliated RrgA‐negative pneumococci was significantly less compared with wild‐type; in contrast, non‐piliated pneumococci expressing non‐polymeric RrgA had similar numbers of bacteria in the nasopharynx as piliated wild‐type bacteria. These data suggest that RrgA is central in pilus‐mediated adherence and disease, even in the absence of polymeric pilus production.

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