Abstract
The afimbrial adhesive sheath, encoded by the afa-3 gene cluster, is composed of two proteins with different roles in bacterium–HeLa cell interactions. AfaE is required for adhesion and AfaD for internalization. In this study, we found that the AfaD invasin was structurally and functionally conserved among human afa-expressing strains, independently of AfaE subtype and clinical origin of the Escherichia coli isolate. The AggB protein from enteroaggregative E. coli was also found to be an AfaD-related invasin. These data suggest that AfaD is the prototype of a family of invasins encoded by adhesion-associated operons in pathogenic E. coli.
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