Abstract

FimH is a mannose-specific adhesin located on the tip of type 1 fimbriae of Escherichia coli that is capable of mediating shear-enhanced bacterial adhesion. FimH consists of a fimbria-associated pilin domain and a mannose-binding lectin domain, with the binding pocket positioned opposite the interdomain interface. By using the yeast two-hybrid system, purified lectin and pilin domains, and docking simulations, we show here that the FimH domains interact with one another. The affinity for mannose is greatly enhanced (up to 300-fold) in FimH variants in which the interdomain interaction is disrupted by structural mutations in either the pilin or lectin domains. Also, affinity to mannose is dramatically enhanced in isolated lectin domains or in FimH complexed with the chaperone molecule that is wedged between the domains. Furthermore, FimH with native structure mediates weak binding at low shear stress but shifts to strong binding at high shear, whereas FimH with disrupted interdomain contacts (or the isolated lectin domain) mediates strong binding to mannose-coated surfaces even under low shear. We propose that interactions between lectin and pilin domains decrease the affinity of the mannose-binding pocket via an allosteric mechanism. We further suggest that mechanical force at high shear stress separates the two domains, allowing the lectin domain to switch from a low affinity to a high affinity state. This shift provides a mechanism for FimH-mediated shear-enhanced adhesion by enabling the adhesin to form catch bond-like interactions that are longer lived at high tensile force.

Highlights

  • To target cells, and mediates biofilm formation on medical implants

  • Whereas many of the mutations are located in various regions of the lectin domain (Ld), some are found in the pilin domain (Pd), with majority of all mutations located around the interdomain interface

  • The FimH and Pand L-selectin-mediated binding have been suggested to occur via a catch bond mechanism (2, 3, 6, 10 –14), where the receptor-ligand interaction is enhanced by tensile force

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

Lectin domain; Pd, pilin domain; aa, amino acid(s); 1M, monomannose; BSA, bovine serum albumin; Ni-NTA, nickelnitrilotriacetic acid; SPR, surface plasmon resonance; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; MD, molecular dynamics. We show that the fimbriae-anchoring Pd could play a direct role in modulating the activity of the mannose-binding Ld. Here we show that the fimbriae-anchoring Pd could play a direct role in modulating the activity of the mannose-binding Ld This modulation occurs through interdomain interactions that keep the Ld in the 1M weak-binding state. This state can switch to a 1M strong-binding state when the Ld is separated from Pd. the interdomain regulation we report here provides a mechanism for switching from weak to strong binding under high shear stress

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