Abstract

Mycoplasma genitalium is a sexually transmitted bacterial pathogen that infects men and women. Antigenic variation of MgpB and MgpC, the immunodominant adherence proteins of M. genitalium, is thought to contribute to immune evasion and chronic infection. We investigated the evolution of mgpB and mgpC sequences in men with non-gonococcal urethritis persistently infected with M. genitalium, including two men with anti-M. genitalium antibodies at enrollment and two that developed antibodies during follow-up. Each of the four patients was persistently infected with a different strain type and each patient produced antibodies targeting MgpB and MgpC. Amino acid sequence evolution in the variable regions of MgpB and MgpC occurred in all four patients with changes observed in single and multiple variable regions over time. Using the available crystal structure of MgpC of the G37 type strain we found that predicted conformational B cell epitopes localize predominantly to the variable region of MgpC, amino acids that changed during patient infection lie in these epitopes, and variant amino acids are in close proximity to the conserved sialic acid binding pocket. These findings support the hypothesis that sequence variation functions to avoid specific antibodies thereby contributing to persistence in the genital tract.

Highlights

  • M. genitalium is increasingly recognized as a sexually transmitted pathogen in men as a frequent cause of acute and chronic non-chlamydial, non-gonococcal urethritis (NGU) [1]

  • The goal of this study was to determine the extent of sequence variation in mgpB and mgpC over time in men with NGU who were persistently infected with M. genitalium

  • We analyzed sequence variation in all four variable regions (B, EF, G, and KLM) of the mgpBC expression site in M. genitalium cultured from the urine of four men with NGU during persistent infection spanning 28 to 50 days

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Summary

Objectives

The goal of this study was to determine the extent of sequence variation in mgpB and mgpC over time in men with NGU who were persistently infected with M. genitalium

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Results
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