Mapping of a surface-exposed, conformational epitope of the P6 protein of Haemophilus influenzae.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

P6 is an outer membrane protein of Haemophilus influenzae that is antigenically conserved and considered a candidate component of future H. influenzae vaccines. P6 contains a surface-exposed epitope recognized by monoclonal antibody (MAb) 3B9. This epitope has been shown to be distinct from that recognized by the P6-specific MAbs 7F3 and 4G4 in a competitive inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). MAb 3B9 did not bind to synthetic P6-specific sequential and overlapping hexameric peptides. Five peptides made to correspond to P6 sequences with high probabilities of surface exposure did not inhibit binding of MAb 3B9 to P6. An antiserum to one of the peptides, designated SP66, inhibited binding of MAb 3B9 to P6. A rabbit antiserum to P6 bound to sequential hexameric peptides, Gly-87AsnThrAspGluArgGlyThr-94, which were in the SP66 region of P6. This antiserum inhibited the binding of P6 to MAb 3B9 in a competitive inhibition ELISA. P6 mutations with His and Ala substitutions at residues Thr-88 and Asn-89 still bound MAb 3B9. MAb 3B9 reacted with Escherichia coli OmpA and Salmonella typhimurium OmpA. Sequence comparisons of P6 with these proteins indicated that the residue in the SP66 region responsible for binding is either Gly-87, Asp-90, or Gly-93. Mercaptoethanol reduction abolished MAb 3B9 binding to E. coli OmpA and S. typhimurium OmpA. In these proteins, immediately downstream of the second cysteine, there is an ArgArg dipeptide which is identical to and aligns with Arg-147Arg-148 in P6. This dipeptide has a high probability of surface exposure in P6. Mutagenesis of the Arg-147Arg-148 to an AlaAla dipeptide in P6 abolished binding of MAb 3B9, demonstrating that it was either a portion of the epitope or important in the protein folding necessary for expression of this epitope. This study demonstrates that MAb 3B9 recognizes a conserved conformational determinant on the surface of H. influenzae that is composed of two discontinuous regions of P6.

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