Abstract

ABSTRACTNontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) is an important pathogen in individuals of all ages. The lipooligosaccharide (LOS) of NTHi has evolved a complex structure that can be attributed to a multiplicity of glycosyltransferases, the random switching of glycosyltransferase gene expression via phase variation, and the complex structure of its core region with multiple glycoform branch points. This article adds to that complexity by describing a multifunctional enzyme (LsgB) which optimally functions when the species is grown on a solid surface and which can add either a ketodeoxyoctanoate (KDO) or an N-acetylneuramic acid (Neu5Ac) moiety to a terminal N-acetyllactosamine structure of LOS. Our studies show that expression of lsgB is reduced four- to sixfold when NTHi is grown in broth. The substrate that the enzyme utilizes is dependent upon the concentration of free Neu5Ac (between 1 and 10 µg/ml) in the environment. In environments in which Neu5Ac is below that level, the enzyme utilizes endogenous CMP-KDO as the substrate. Our studies show that during in vivo growth in an NTHi biofilm, the KDO moiety is expressed by the organism. Monoclonal antibody 6E4, which binds KDO, is bactericidal for NTHi strains that express the KDO epitope at high levels. In a survey of 33 NTHi strains isolated from healthy and diseased individuals, the antibody was bactericidal (>90% kill) for 12 strains (36%). These studies open up the possibility of using a KDO-based glycoconjugate vaccine as part of a multicomponent vaccine against NTHi.

Highlights

  • Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) is an important pathogen in individuals of all ages

  • To confirm the specificity of monoclonal antibody (MAb) 6E4, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) was used to test the binding specificity of MAb 6E4 binding to KDO monosaccharide

  • NTHi LOS is an extremely complex structure. This paper documents this complexity by describing an enzyme, LsgB, which has been shown to be an LOS sialyltransferase [19], that can substitute KDO on a terminal N-acetyllactosamine when Neu5Ac is present at levels below 10 ␮g/ml in the growth media

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Summary

Introduction

Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) is an important pathogen in individuals of all ages. We describe a mechanism by which the bacteria decorates its surface lipooligosaccharide with a sugar unique to Gram-negative bacteria, ketodeoxyoctanoate (KDO) This sugar decoration is present during active infection and we have shown that an antibody directed against this sugar can result in killing of the organism. Many NTHi strains can utilize Neu5Ac as a nutrient source for carbon and nitrogen This sugar has been shown to be important in pathogenesis, as it is needed to sustain an infection in the chinchilla otitis media model [11] and is a factor necessary for successful biofilm formation in vivo and in vitro [12]. SiaA sialylates a terminal N-acetyllactosamine [17], and like LsgB, it is not phase variable

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