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OmpA-like protein influences cell shape and adhesive activity of Tannerella forsythia
Authors:Abe T  Murakami Y  Nagano K  Hasegawa Y  Moriguchi K  Ohno N  Shimozato K  Yoshimura F
Affiliation:Department of Microbiology, School of Dentistry, Aichi Gakuin University, Nagoya, Japan.
Abstract:
Tannerella forsythia, a gram-negative fusiform rod, is implicated in several types of oral anaerobic infections. Most gram-negative bacteria have OmpA-like proteins that are homologous to the OmpA protein in Escherichia coli. We identified an OmpA-like protein in T. forsythia encoded by the tf1331 gene as one of the major proteins by mass spectrometric analysis. Two-dimensional, diagonal electrophoresis showed that the OmpA-like protein formed a dimeric or trimeric structure via intermolecular disulfide bonds. A biotin labeling experiment revealed that a portion of the protein was exposed on the cell surface, even though T. forsythia possesses an S-layer at the outermost cell surface. Using a tf1331-deletion mutant, we showed that the OmpA-like protein affected cell morphology. The length of the mutant cell was reduced almost by half. Cell swelling was observed in more than 40% of the mutant cells. Moreover, the mutant exhibited decreased adhesion to fibronectin, retarded autoaggregation, and reduced cell surface hydrophobicity. These results suggest that the OmpA-like protein in T. forsythia plays an important role in cellular integrity and adhesive function.
Keywords:autoaggregation  bacterial adherence  cell morphology  hydrophobicity  outer membrane protein  periodontal disease
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