Publication | Open Access
Novel structure of the N-terminal helical domain of BibA, a group B streptococcus immunogenic bacterial adhesin
10
Citations
53
References
2020
Year
BibA, a group B streptococcus (GBS) surface protein, has been shown to protect the pathogen from phagocytic killing by sequestering a complement inhibitor: C4b-binding protein (C4BP). Here, the X-ray crystallographic structure of a GBS BibA fragment (BibA<sub>126-398</sub>) and a low-resolution small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) structure of the full-length N-terminal domain (BibA<sub>34-400</sub>) are described. The BibA<sub>126-398</sub> fragment crystal structure displayed a novel and predominantly helical structure. The tertiary arrangement of helices forms four antiparallel three-helix-bundle-motif repeats, with one long helix from a bundle extending into the next. Multiple mutations on recombinant BibA<sub>34-400</sub> delayed the degradation of the protein, and circular dichroism spectroscopy of BibA<sub>34-400</sub> suggested a similar secondary-structure composition to that observed in the crystallized BibA<sub>126-398</sub> fragment. A model was generated for the 92 N-terminal residues (BibA<sub>34-125</sub>) using structural similarity prediction programs, and a BibA<sub>34-400</sub> model was generated by combining the coordinates of BibA<sub>34-126</sub> and BibA<sub>126-398</sub>. The X-ray structure of BibA<sub>126-398</sub> and the model of BibA<sub>34-400</sub> fitted well into the calculated SAXS envelope. One possible binding site for the BibA N-terminal domain was localized to the N-terminal CCP (complement-control protein) domains of the C4BP α-chain, as indicated by the decreased binding of BibA to a ΔCCP1 C4BP α-chain mutant. In summary, it is suggested that the GBS surface protein BibA, which consists of three antiparallel α-helical-bundle motifs, is unique and belongs to a new class of Gram-positive surface adhesins.
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