Structural and serological relatedness of Haemophilus influenzae type b pili.

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RESUMO

The structural and serological relatedness of the pilus proteins of several isolates of Haemophilus influenzae type b cultured from patients with invasive disease and from different anatomic sites within the same patient was examined. Epithelial cell-adherent variants of 25 nonadherent parent isolates were obtained by selection for organisms that adhered to human erythrocytes. Outer membrane protein analysis by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed the presence of an additional 24- to 24.5-kilodalton protein among all adherent variants but absent from all nonadherent parent isolates. Polyclonal rabbit antiserum against the intact native pilus protein of H. influenzae M43 cross-reacted with 20 of 25 adherent H. influenzae in both immunodot and slide-agglutination assays. No differences in reactivity among isolates cultured from more than one anatomic site in the same patient were noted. Anti-M43 pilus antiserum had bactericidal activity against both the homologous strain and a heterologous strain that demonstrated serologic identity in the immunodot and slide agglutination assays. The adherence of these strains to human epithelial cells in vitro was inhibited by Fab fragments purified from the antipilus antiserum. These data indicate that a remarkable degree of homogeneity in pilin subunit size exists among the pili of H. influenzae type b and that major antigenic determinants are shared among most of these pili. Also, antibodies directed against H. influenzae pilus proteins may be able to contribute to host defenses through serum bactericidal activity and by blocking the adherence of this bacterium to host epithelial cells.

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