6533b7cffe1ef96bd1257d4b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Human kininogens interact with M protein, a bacterial surface protein and virulence determinant.

Lars BjörckWerner Müller-esterlA B Ben NasrHeiko Herwald

subject

Kininogen bindingMyeloma proteinStreptococcus pyogenesM1 proteinMolecular Sequence DataEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assaymedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryPeptide MappingAntibodiesBacterial ProteinsmedicineHumansAmino Acid SequenceBinding siteMolecular BiologyKininogenAntigens BacterialBinding SitesbiologyVirulenceKininogensFibrinogen bindingFibrinogenCell BiologyLow-molecular-weight kininogenMolecular biologyStreptococcus pyogenesbiology.proteinCarrier Proteinscirculatory and respiratory physiologyResearch ArticleBacterial Outer Membrane ProteinsProtein Binding

description

Streptococcus pyogenes, the most significant streptococcal species in clinical medicine, expresses surface proteins with affinity for several human plasma proteins. Here we report that kininogens, the precursors to the vasoactive kinins, bind to the surface of S. pyogenes. M protein, a surface molecule and a major virulence factor-in these bacteria, occurs in > 80 different serotypes. Among 49 strains of S. pyogenes, all of different M serotypes, 41 bound radiolabelled kininogens, whereas 6 M protein-negative mutant strains showed no affinity. M protein of most serotypes bind fibrinogen, and among the 55 strains tested, binding of kininogens was closely correlated to fibrinogen binding (r = 0.88, P < 0.0001). Western blotting, slot binding and enzyme immunoassay experiments demonstrated that M proteins isolated from S. pyogenes of three different M protein serotypes (M1, M6 and M46) bound kininogens. The affinity between kininogens and M1 protein was determined to be 5 x 10(7) M-1 and < or = 10(6) M-1 for high molecular weight (H-kininogen) and low molecular weight kininogen, respectively. The kininogen binding site was tentatively mapped to the N-terminal portion of M1 protein, and this site does not overlap the specific and separate binding sites for albumin, IgG and fibrinogen using monoclonal antibodies to, and synthetic peptides of, the kininogen sequence, the major M protein-binding site(s) was mapped to the C-terminal portion of the H-kininogen light chain. We anticipate that the kininogen-M protein interaction contributes to the host-parasite relationship in S. pyogenes infections.

https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1136446/