Abstract

In Gram-negative bacteria, outer membrane-associated lipoproteins can either face the periplasm or protrude out of the bacterial surface. The mechanisms involved in lipoprotein transport through the outer membrane are not fully elucidated. Some lipoproteins reach the surface by using species-specific transport machinery. By contrast, a still poorly characterized group of lipoproteins appears to always cross the outer membrane, even when transplanted from one organism to another. To investigate such lipoproteins, we tested the expression and compartmentalization in E. coli of three surface-exposed lipoproteins, two from Neisseria meningitidis (Nm-fHbp and NHBA) and one from Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (Aa-fHbp). We found that all three lipoproteins were lipidated and compartmentalized in the E. coli outer membrane and in outer membrane vesicles. Furthermore, fluorescent antibody cell sorting analysis, proteolytic surface shaving, and confocal microscopy revealed that all three proteins were also exposed on the surface of the outer membrane. Removal or substitution of the first four amino acids following the lipidated cysteine residue and extensive deletions of the C-terminal regions in Nm-fHbp did not prevent the protein from reaching the surface of the outer membrane. Heterologous polypeptides, fused to the C termini of Nm-fHbp and NHBA, were efficiently transported to the E. coli cell surface and compartmentalized in outer membrane vesicles, demonstrating that these lipoproteins can be exploited in biotechnological applications requiring Gram-negative bacterial surface display of foreign polypeptides.

Highlights

  • In Gram-negative bacteria, outer membrane-associated lipoproteins can either face the periplasm or protrude out of the bacterial surface

  • To what occurs in their natural hosts, all three proteins are exposed on the surface of E. coli, supporting the evidence that the final destiny of some lipoproteins is built in their structure and that their transport machinery is conserved among some Gram-negative species

  • Nm-factor H binding protein (fHbp) and NHBA Are Exposed on the Surface of E. coli—With the previous experiments we provided strong experimental evidence that Nm-fHbp and NHBA are lipidated when expressed in E. coli BL21⌬ompA strain and that the two lipoproteins are not anchored to the inner membrane, in line with the fact that no retention signatures are present at amino acid positions ϩ2, ϩ3, and ϩ4 of both proteins

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Summary

Introduction

In Gram-negative bacteria, outer membrane-associated lipoproteins can either face the periplasm or protrude out of the bacterial surface. A still poorly characterized group of lipoproteins appears to always cross the outer membrane, even when transplanted from one organism to another To investigate such lipoproteins, we tested the expression and compartmentalization in E. coli of three surface-exposed lipoproteins, two from Neisseria meningitidis (Nm-fHbp and NHBA) and one from Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (Aa-fHbp). In Gram-positive bacteria, lipoproteins cross the membrane and remain attached on its surface through their lipid chains, whereas in Gram-negative bacteria they can be found in three different cellular compartments: [1] attached to the periplasmic side of the inner membrane (IM), [2] attached to the periplasmic side of the outer membrane (OM), and [3] exposed on the surface of the outer membrane. The mechanisms that determine whether a lipoprotein remains attached to the inner leaflet of the OM, or is presented on the bacterial surface, are still not well characterized

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