IIBBA   05544
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES BIOQUIMICAS DE BUENOS AIRES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
BtaE: A polar adhesin involved in binding of Brucella suis to host cells and virulence in mouse
Autor/es:
RUIZ, VERONICA; POSADAS, DIANA M; ESTEIN, SILVIA; VAN DER HENST, CHARLES; ABDIAN, PATRICIA L; SIEIRA, RODRIGO; DE BOLLE, XAVIER; ZORREGUIETA, ANGELES
Lugar:
Mendoza
Reunión:
Congreso; XLVIII Reunión Anual de la Sociedad Argentina de Investigación Bioquímica y Biología Molecular; 2012
Resumen:
Increasing evidence indicates that adhesion of Brucella spp. to host cells is an important step to establish infection.We have previously shown that an unipolar type I monomeric autotransporter (BmaC)mediates the binding of Brucella suis to host cells through cell associated fibronectin. Genome analysis shows that the B. suis genome encodes several additional potential adhesins. In this work we show that a protein from the Trimeric Autotransporter Family named as BtaE is involved in the binding of B. suis to hyaluronic acid and fibronectin. The B. suis btaE mutant was: impaired in the ability to bind to host cells, outcompeted by the wild type strain in co-infections experiments, and showed an attenuated phenotype in the mouse model. Similar to BmaC, the BtaE adhesin was only observed at one of the cell poles. In Brucella and other alpha-proteobacteria, the two daughter cells generated by asymmetric division are differentiated bacteria displaying different pole markers. Using pole markers we observed that BtaE is associated with the new pole. Furthermore, BmaC was also found to be localized to the same (new) pole, suggesting that Brucella adhesins are located at the new pole of the bacteria at a particular stage of the cell cycle.