Abstract

Chlamydia trachomatis is the most prevalent cause of bacterial sexually transmitted diseases and the leading cause of preventable blindness worldwide. Global control of Chlamydia will best be achieved with a vaccine, a primary target for which is the major outer membrane protein, MOMP, which comprises ∼60% of the outer membrane protein mass of this bacterium. In the absence of experimental structural information on MOMP, three previously published topology models presumed a16-stranded barrel architecture. Here, we use the latest β-barrel prediction algorithms, previous 2D topology modeling results, and comparative modeling methodology to build a 3D model based on the 16-stranded, trimeric assumption. We find that while a 3D MOMP model captures many structural hallmarks of a trimeric 16-stranded β-barrel porin, and is consistent with most of the experimental evidence for MOMP, MOMP residues 320–334 cannot be modeled as β-strands that span the entire membrane, as is consistently observed in published 16-stranded β-barrel crystal structures. Given the ambiguous results for β-strand delineation found in this study, recent publications of membrane β-barrel structures breaking with the canonical rule for an even number of β-strands, findings of β-barrels with strand-exchanged oligomeric conformations, and alternate folds dependent upon the lifecycle of the bacterium, we suggest that although the MOMP porin structure incorporates canonical 16-stranded conformations, it may have novel oligomeric or dynamic structural changes accounting for the discrepancies observed.

Highlights

  • C. trachomatis, a gram-negative bacterium, is estimated to infect 90 million people worldwide each year [1]

  • Porins have a structural topology comprised of antiparallel b-strands spanning the outer membrane, a water-filled inner channel, tight b-turns extending into the periplasmic region and flexible loops reaching beyond the extracellular surface

  • Several studies have confirmed that the C. trachomatis MOMP shares the characteristics of other gram-negative bacterial porins; it has a monomeric molecular weight of 39.5 kDa, a hydrophobic residue content of,40%, and migration patterns on SDS-page gels consistent with trimeric oligomerization [15]

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Summary

Introduction

C. trachomatis, a gram-negative bacterium, is estimated to infect 90 million people worldwide each year [1]. In some individuals these infections cause long-term consequences including pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, sterility or blindness [2,3,4,5]. MOMP, coded by the ompA gene, is considered a member of the general porin class of proteins (http://scop.mrclmb.cam.ac.uk/scop) [11], a group important for the passive transport of ions, sugars and nucleotides across the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria [12,13,14]. Native MOMP transports sugars at rates similar to Pseudomonas aeruginosa OprF [15,16,17]

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