Hemin-binding proteins in pathogenic Leptospira : diagonastic potential of Hbpa and the identification of second hemin-buinding protein HbpB in Leptospira interrogans serovar Manilae
Hemin-binding proteins in pathogenic Leptospira : diagonastic potential of Hbpa and the identification of second hemin-buinding protein HbpB in Leptospira interrogans serovar Manilae
Files
Date
2014-06
Authors
Subha Sivakolundu
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Hyderabad
Abstract
Leptospirosis is an emerging zoonotic disease that is of concern globally
and in India. The spirochetal pathogen belonging to the genus Leptospira causes
high morbidity and mortality in animals and humans. Due to favoured transmission
in monsoon seasons, this disease often breaks out as epidemics seasonally. The
disease is usually self-limiting in humans but can progress to the severe fatal form
known as Weil’s disease.
The disease is usually self-limiting and the majority of patients recover
without any adverse effects. The symptoms associated with the disease include
severe body pain, headache, fever that is often mistaken for the common flu. If left
untreated, the disease can progress to Weil’s disease, in which damage is seen in
different organs, particularly liver, kidney and the lungs. Hemorrhagic
manifestations and tissue damage is often fatal. Proper and timely diagnosis is the
major lacuna in the control of this disease and hence it is often under-reported as
it is clinically similar to flu, dengue and malaria. The lack of rapid, economic and
easy-to-perform tests are lacking for the diagnosis of leptospirosis. The serological
microscopic agglutination test (MAT) is used as the ‘gold standard’; however, due
to several disadvantages it cannot be performed in routine diagnostic laboratories.
Hence, there is a need to develop a simple serological test for the detection of
antibodies against leptospiral-specific antigenic determinants. Understanding host-
pathogen interactions result in the identification of novel molecules that can be
used as diagnostic and vaccine candidates.
Acquisition of iron by pathogenic Leptospira spp. was first reported by
Sritharan and her group who demonstrated direct acquisition of iron by pathogenic
L. interrogans serovar Lai by the hemin-binding protein HbpA, an 81 kDa TonB-
dependant outer membrane protein up-regulated upon iron limitation. HbpA is
present in pathogenic serovars and is absent in saprophytic leptospires. This,
coupled to the in vivo expression of the protein made HbpA an ideal candidate for
diagnosis. PCR amplification of hbpA from the genomic DNA of several clinical
isolates identified all serovars belonging to L. interrogans spp.
As the focus of this study was to develop an ELISA-based test for the
serodiagnosis of leptospirosis, the diagnostic potential of HbpA was evaluated in
xv
both bovine and human serum samples by ELISA. Serum samples from patients
with systemic leptospirosis were screened by MAT, HbpA-ELISA and the
commercial PanBio ELISA. The performance of HbpA-ELISA was superior to
PanBio ELISA and it was observed that ELISA-based screening identified larger
number of samples compared to MAT. The latter is a specific test for leptospirosis
but, due to its serovar specificity can give false negative if the respective serovar
was no included in the reference panel for screening. This was reflected strongly
in patients with leptospiral uveitis, 50% of whom tested MAT-negative, with the two
ELISA tests identifying the majority of the cases with confirmed clinical symptoms
of the disease. The mean anti-HbpA antibody titres in both the groups were
significantly higher in patients when compared with controls (P<0.05) that included
subjects with non-leptospiral uveitis, cataract and endemic healthy normal
subjects. HbpA-ELISA showed higher sensitivity (93%) and specificity (58%) over
PanBio ELISA.
Screening of bovine serum samples by HbpA-ELISA was compared with
MAT and ELISA based LilL41 and LipL32, two potential diagnostic antigens,
specific for pathogenic serovars. The test showed a κ value of 0.920 for HbpA-
ELISA vs LipL41-ELISA and 0.887 for HpbA-ELISA vs LipL32-ELISA indicating
good agreement of HbpA with the two leptospiral antigens. All the three antigen-
based ELISA tests showed 100% sensitivity with MAT; the specificity, however
was low (~ 63%), for reasons of not including a larger panel of serovars. Since no
epidemiological data is available in India on the prevailing serovars in a specific
geographical region, a random panel of serovars had to be chosen. Thus, HbpA-
ELISA was effective in the testing of both human and bovine serum samples and
can possibly replace the cumbersome MAT.
Early detection of the disease is of paramount importance in the
development of control measures. The organisms, upon entry into the mammalian
host remain in circulation for about a week. During this period, culture is possible
but due to the fastidious nature of the pathogen, it has not been easy to culture
from blood samples. Since antigen detection is more feasible, we developed
monoclonal antibodies against HbpA. Four monoclones 1F5.1C, 2E7.1C, 7C2.1C
and 10E3.1C, belonging to IgG2b sub-class expressed high titers of anti-HbpA
antibodies, with negligible cross-reactivity with other bacterial pathogens. MAbs
xvi
7C2.1C and 10E3.1C were specific for the C-terminal region of HbpA protein as
determined by western-blot analysis and indirect ELISA. These MAbs, when used
as primary antibody in sandwich ELISA were able to detect 0.48 ng of rHbpA.
The essentiality of hbpA was studied in a hbpA mutant strain of L.
interrogans serovar Manilae. The hbpA mutant strain M601, generated by random
transposon mutagenesis was a kind gift by Adler and his group. In the presence of
hemin as the sole source of iron, the mutant strain was unable to grow and
showed no increase in cell number for almost 6-7 days after inoculation. Growth,
though seen after 7 days was much lower compared to the wild-type (WT) strain.
RNA transcripts of the two strains grown under high (10 ug Fe / mL), low (200 μm
EDDA) and hemin (1 μg in medium pre-incubated with 200 μm EDDA) showed
changes in the levels of several iron-regulated genes, previous reported by
microarray analysis. In this study, an interesting observation was the six-fold
increase in the level of LA3149, annotated as encoding a Ton-dependant outer
membrane protein, possibly a hemin-receptor. Since this was indicative of a
second hemin acquisition system, the gene was clones and expressed. The
recombinant protein, proved to bind hemin-agarose beads was called as hemin-
binding protein B (HbpB). Homology modeling with Phyre program using
ferripyoverdine (Fpv) receptor from Psedomonas aeruginosa as template showed
HbpB to fold into the characteristic β-barrel and the globular plug domain. The
presence of the N-terminal TonB box, presence of the FRAP-NNHL motif with a
conserved histidine residue located between the two motifs (aa 550) confirmed it
was a TonB-dependant, hemin-binding protein.
In conclusion, the potential of HbpA as a diagnostic antigen and the
identification of HbpB as a second hemin-binding protein in the absence of HbpA
are the major achievements from this study