Abstract

Sponges (phylum Porifera) are the phylogenetically oldest metazoa; as filter feeders, they are abundantly exposed to marine microorganisms. Here we present data indicating that the demosponge Suberites domuncula is provided with a recognition system for gram-negative bacteria. The lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-interacting protein was identified as a receptor on the sponge cell surface, which recognizes the bacterial endotoxin LPS. The cDNA was isolated, and the protein (Mr 49,937) was expressed. During binding to LPS, the protein dimerizes and interacts with MyD88, which was also identified and cloned. The sponge MyD88 (Mr 28,441) is composed of two protein interaction domains, a Toll/interleukin-1 receptor domain (found in MyD88 and in Toll-like receptors) and a death domain (present in MyD88 and interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase). Northern blot experiments and in situ hybridization studies showed that after LPS treatment, the level of the LPS-interacting protein remains unchanged, whereas MyD88 is strongly up-regulated. A perforin-like molecule (Mr 74,171), the macrophage-expressed protein, was identified as an executing molecule of this pathway. This gene is highly expressed after LPS treatment, especially at the surfaces of the animals. The recombinant protein possesses biological activity and eliminates gram-negative bacteria; it is inactive against gram-positive bacteria. These data indicate that S. domuncula is provided with an innate immune system against gram-negative bacteria; the ligand LPS (a pathogen-associated molecular pattern) is recognized by the pattern recognition receptor (LPS-interacting protein), which interacts with MyD88. A signal transduction is established, which results in an elevated expression of MyD88 as well as of the macrophage-expressed protein as an executing protein.

Highlights

  • Sponges are the phylogenetically oldest metazoa; as filter feeders, they are abundantly exposed to marine microorganisms

  • These data indicate that S. domuncula is provided with an innate immune system against Gramnegative bacteria; the ligand LPS is recognized by the pattern recognition receptor (LPS-interacting protein), which interacts with myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88)

  • We show that S. domuncula possesses the TLR adapter molecule MyD88, which binds to a demospongespecific protein that has been termed by us LPS-interacting protein, due to its property to bind to bacterial LPS

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

The sources of chemicals and enzymes used were given previously [27, 28]. Sigma provided LPS from Escherichia coli 088:B5 (L2880), fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled LPS (FITC-LPS (E. coli 088:B5; F8666)), Cy3 antibodies, and natural seawater. One forward primer (5ЈTATCTCGAGTCCGAAGCCAGTGGAAGTTTGA-3Ј (the XhoI restriction site is underlined)) was designed against aa 38 – 44 (SEASGSL; nt 181–202) and one reverse primer (5Ј-TATTCTAGATTACACATTGAGAGTCATCAAACCTA-3Ј) (XbaI)) against aa 444 – 451 (RFDDSQCV; nt 1398 –1421) within the open reading frame were used to isolate by PCR the 1,241-bp-long segment It was cloned into the XhoI and XbaI sites of expression vector pBAD/gIIIA (Invitrogen), which contained at the 3Ј terminus the myc epitope and the oligohistidine region. 100 ␮l of the respective pAbs were adsorbed to 20 ␮g of the recombinant proteins (rMyD88, rSLIP, and rMPEG) during an incubation period of 30 min (4 °C) prior to their use. The membranes were probed with the pAbs and detected by anti-rabbit IgG (peroxidase-coupled) using the BM Chemiluminescence Blotting Substrate kit (Roche Applied Science). The percentage inhibition was calculated as follows: (number of colonies (control ϩ test)/number of colonies (control)) ϫ 100; n ϭ 5

RESULTS
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