Effect of proteolytic cleavage of surface-exposed proteins on infectivity of Chlamydia trachomatis.

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RESUMO

The proteolytic cleavage of Chlamydia trachomatis LGV-434 surface proteins and resultant effects on infectivity and association with cultured human epithelial (HeLa) cells have been examined. Of several proteases examined, trypsin, chymotrypsin, and thermolysin extensively cleaved the chlamydial major outer membrane protein (MOMP). Two proteases, trypsin and thermolysin, cleaved the MOMP to the extent that monomeric MOMP was not detectable by immunoblotting with monospecific polyclonal antibodies. In the case of thermolysin, not even antigenic fragments were detected. Surprisingly, infectivity toward HeLa cells was not diminished. In addition, the association of intrinsically 14C-radiolabeled elementary bodies (EBs) with HeLa cells or their dissociation by proteinase K was not measurably affected by prior trypsinization of the EBs. Trypsinization of lactoperoxidase surface-iodinated elementary bodies demonstrated that most of the 125I-labeled surface proteins were cleaved. In all cases, however, a number of proteolytic cleavage fragments remained associated with the EB surface after surface proteolysis. When trypsinized EBs were electrophoresed under nonreducing conditions and immunoblotted with either polyclonal or type-specific monoclonal MOMP antibodies, MOMP was found in a large oligomeric form that failed to enter the polyacrylamide stacking gel. Additionally, trypsinized viable EBs bound radioiodinated type-specific MOMP monoclonal antibody as efficiently as did the control nontrypsinized organisms. Taken together, the findings indicate that although the MOMP is highly susceptible to surface proteolysis, the supramolecular structure of the protein on the EB surface is apparently maintained by disulfide interactions. Thus, if surface-exposed chlamydial proteins are involved in the initial interaction of chlamydiae with eucaryotic cells, the functional domains of these proteins which mediate this interaction must be resistant to proteolysis and remain associated with the EB surface.

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