Abstract

BackgroundThe polymorphic membrane protein D (PmpD) in Chlamydia is structurally similar to autotransporter proteins described in other bacteria and may be involved in cellular and humoral protective immunity against Chlamydia. The mechanism of PmpD post-translational processing and the role of its protein products in the pathogenesis of chlamydial infection have not been very well elucidated to date.Methodology/Principal FindingsHere we examined the expression and post-translational processing of the protein product of the pmpD gene during the life cycle of C. trachomatis serovars A, D, and L2. Each of these three serovars targets different human organs and tissues and encodes a different pmpD gene nucleotide sequence. Our quantitative real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction results demonstrate that the pmpD gene is up-regulated at 12–24 hours after infection regardless of the Chlamydia serovar. This up-regulation is coincidental with the period of exponential growth and replication of reticulate bodies (RB) of Chlamydia and indicates a probable similarity in function of pmpD in serovars A, D, and L2 of Chlamydia. Using mass spectrometry analysis, we identified the protein products of post-translational processing of PmpD of C. trachomatis serovar L2 and propose a double pathway model for PmpD processing, with one cleavage site between the passenger and autotransporter domains and the other site in the middle of the passenger domain. Notably, when Chlamydia infected culture cells were subjected to low (28°C) temperature, PmpD post-translational processing and secretion was found to be uninhibited in the resulting persistent infection. In addition, confocal microscopy of cells infected with Chlamydia confirms our earlier hypothesis that PmpD is secreted outside Chlamydia and its secretion increases with growth of the chlamydial inclusion.Conclusion/SignificanceThe results of this current study involving multiple Chlamydia serovars support the general consensus that the pmpD gene is maximally expressed at mid infection and provide new information about PmpD as an autotransporter protein which is post-translationally processed and secreted outside Chlamydia during normal and low temperature induced persistent chlamydial infection.

Highlights

  • C. trachomatis, an obligate intracellular bacterium, is an important human pathogen causing a variety of infections

  • In another approach utilizing different Extraction Buffers from a ProteoExtractH Subcellular Proteome Extraction Kit, we found the

  • To determine if the variation in the pmpD gene sequence in Lymphogranuloma Venereum (LGV) and non-LGV Chlamydia strains leads to different pmpD expression patterns, we examined pmpD expression profiling in C. trachomatis serovars A, D, and L2

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Summary

Introduction

C. trachomatis, an obligate intracellular bacterium, is an important human pathogen causing a variety of infections. Since the genome of C. trachomatis serovar D/UW-3 was first described in 1998, the genomes of three more C. trachomatis serovars, A/HAR13, L2/434/Bu, and L2b/UCH-1/proctitis, each of which targets specific human organ and tissues, have been determined [1,2,3] Genomic analysis of these Chlamydia strains and C. muridarum (formerly C. trachomatis MoPn) revealed several genes including the family of the polymorphic membrane protein (pmp) genes with varying degrees of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) which were suggested to be associated with Chlamydia tissue tropism and pathogenesis for each disease group [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. The mechanism of PmpD post-translational processing and the role of its protein products in the pathogenesis of chlamydial infection have not been very well elucidated to date

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