posted on 2019-12-10, 16:05authored byDanila Elango, Benjamin L. Schulz
Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) is a leading cause of respiratory tract infections worldwide
and continues to be a global health burden. Adhesion and colonization
of host cells are crucial steps in bacterial pathogenesis, and in
many strains of NTHi, the interaction with the host is mediated by
the high molecular weight adhesins HMW1A and HMW2A. These adhesins
are N-glycoproteins that are modified by cytoplasmic
glycosyltransferases HMW1C and HMW2C. Phase variation in the number
of short sequence repeats in the promoters of hmw1A and hmw2A directly
affects their expression. Here, we report the presence of similar
variable repeat elements in the promoters of hmw1C and hmw2C in diverse
NTHi isolates. In an ex vivo assay, we systematically altered the
substrate and glycosyltransferase expression and showed that both
of these factors quantitatively affected the site-specific efficiency
of glycosylation on HMW-A. This represents a novel mechanism through
which phase variation can generate diversity in the quantitative extent
of site-specific post-translational modifications on antigenic surface
proteins. Glycosylation occupancy was incomplete at many sites, variable
between sites, and generally lower close to the C-terminus of HMW-A.
We investigated the causes of this variability. As HMW-C glycosylates
HMW-A in the cytoplasm, we tested how secretion affected glycosylation
on HMW-A and showed that retaining HMW-A in the cytoplasm indeed increased
glycosylation occupancy across the full length of the protein. Site-directed
mutagenesis showed that HMW-C had no inherent preference for glycosylating
asparagines in NxS or NxT sequons. This work provides key insights
into factors contributing to the heterogenous modifications of NTHi
HMW-A adhesins, expands knowledge of NTHi population diversity and
pathogenic capability, and is relevant to vaccine design for NTHi
and related pathogens.