Abstract
Pathogens frequently produce proteins to evade or inhibit host immune responses. One such protein is lymphostatin from attaching and effacing Escherichia coli (also known as lymphocyte inhibitory factor A; LifA), which influences intestinal colonization and inhibits mitogen- and antigen-activated proliferation of T lymphocytes and pro-inflammatory cytokine synthesis. Here, we report the cloning, purification and characterization of a LifA homologue from Chlamydia pecorum. The predicted 382 KDa protein (CPE2_0552) exhibited 36 % identity and 55 % similarity over 3171 amino acids to lymphostatin from enteropathogenic E. coli strain E2348/69. CPE2_0552 shares glycosyltransferase and cysteine protease motifs required for lymphostatin activity, including similarity in the tertiary structure of these domains predicted by AlphaFold 3. Purified CPE2_0552 exhibited a surface envelope similar to that of lymphostatin when analyzed by electron microscopy. CPE2_0552 inhibited concanavalin A-stimulated proliferation of bovine T cells in a concentration-dependent manner, with an inhibitory dose 50 (ID50) of 990 pg/mL. This was 70-fold higher than the ID50 of E. coli E2348/69 lymphostatin tested in parallel on T cells from the same donors (14 ± 4 pg/mL), but was similar to another LifA homologue from E. coli O157:H7 (ToxB). Moreover, CPE2_0552 inhibited the secretion of interferon gamma (IFN?), a key cytokine that influences the outcome of Chlamydia infections. At the concentrations at which CPE2_0552 inhibited T lymphocyte proliferation and IFN? secretion, negligible cytotoxicity was observed after 72 h of stimulation. Our study indicates that E. coli lymphostatin belongs to a wider family of lymphocyte-inhibitory molecules that exist in distantly related bacterial pathogens.
Date made available | 12 Aug 2024 |
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Publisher | Edinburgh DataShare |
Geographical coverage | UNITED KINGDOM,UK |