СAPSULAR ANTIGEN OF YERSINIA PESTIS

Plague is a zoonosis caused by gram-negative bacteria Yersinia pestis, which, as a rule, is transmitted to humans from septicemic rodents by the bites of infected fleas. This microbe killed more people than all of the wars in the human history. Y. pestis circulation in the natural plague foci is ens...

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Main Authors: L. A. Kadnikova, P. K. Kopylov, S. V. Dentovskaya, A. P. Anisimov
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Sankt-Peterburg : NIIÈM imeni Pastera 2015-12-01
Series:Infekciâ i Immunitet
Subjects:
f1
Online Access:https://www.iimmun.ru/iimm/article/view/325
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spelling doaj-a254f5a315ca47f68ca189bc55f071282021-09-21T14:01:26ZrusSankt-Peterburg : NIIÈM imeni PasteraInfekciâ i Immunitet2220-76192313-73982015-12-015320121810.15789/2220-7619-2015-3-201-218230СAPSULAR ANTIGEN OF YERSINIA PESTISL. A. Kadnikova0P. K. Kopylov1S. V. Dentovskaya2A. P. Anisimov3State Research Center for Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Obolensk, Moscow Region, Russian FederationState Research Center for Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Obolensk, Moscow Region, Russian FederationState Research Center for Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Obolensk, Moscow Region, Russian FederationState Research Center for Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Obolensk, Moscow Region, Russian FederationPlague is a zoonosis caused by gram-negative bacteria Yersinia pestis, which, as a rule, is transmitted to humans from septicemic rodents by the bites of infected fleas. This microbe killed more people than all of the wars in the human history. Y. pestis circulation in the natural plague foci is ensured by the whole number of pathogenicity factors with differing functional orientation. This review is devoted to one of them, Y. pestis capsular antigen (F1 or Caf1). The history of its discovery and studying of its genetic control, biosynthesis, isolation and purification, and physicochemical properties are reviewed. Its roles in plague pathogenesis and its application as a main component of plague vaccines are also discussed. Y. pestis capsule under light microscopy is visually amorphous, while high-resolution electron microscopy displays the structure formed from separate fimbria-like cords up to 200 nm long, diverging from the bacterial surface in different directions. At 37°C Y. pestis produce 800–1000 times more capsular antigen than at 28°C. Genes coding for 17.6-kD Caf1 protein, which contains 170 amino acids, are located in caf1 operon of pFra plasmid. Analysis of caf1 operon nucleotide sequence testified its close phylogenetic relationship with the gene clusters coding for pilus adhesins that were secreted with the help of chaperone/usher systems in enterobacteria including six additional adhesins in Y. pestis. Y. pestis multiplication within macrophages is the obligatory stage of plague pathogenesis, and the plague pathogen virulence correlates not with resistance to phagocyte ingesting but with bacterial ability to survive and multiply within phagolysosomes of phagocytes due to neutralization of antibacterial functions of eukaryotic cells. The capsule formed out of the Caf1 aggregates protects Y. pestis from ingestion by naïve host’s phagocytes and prevents from initiation of the alternative pathway of the complement system. Molecular usher Caf1A responsible for capsular antigen anchoring on the surface of bacterial cell has a high affinity to human interleukin 1β. Caf1 can compete with interleukins 1α, 1β, and 1ra in binding to receptors on lymphoid cells preventing development of adequate immune response. Immunodiagnosis of plague is based on detection of Caf1 or anti-Caf1 antibodies since this Y. pestis antigen is species specific. Covering bacterial surfaces capsular antigen is also the paramount component of all modern plague vaccines. Its leading role in induction of intense immunity in mice, rats, monkeys, and men was shown clearly. However, non-capsulated (Caf1–) variants of Y. pestis keeping their virulence at the level of the wild-type strains might be selected and accumulated in immune animals. This indicates inadmissibility of application of monoantigen plague vaccines and necessity for design of immunoprophylactic preparations aimed at two or three molecular targets.https://www.iimmun.ru/iimm/article/view/325yersinia pestisсapsular antigenf1caf1pathogenicity factorpathogenesisimmunogenesisplague
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L. A. Kadnikova
P. K. Kopylov
S. V. Dentovskaya
A. P. Anisimov
spellingShingle L. A. Kadnikova
P. K. Kopylov
S. V. Dentovskaya
A. P. Anisimov
СAPSULAR ANTIGEN OF YERSINIA PESTIS
Infekciâ i Immunitet
yersinia pestis
сapsular antigen
f1
caf1
pathogenicity factor
pathogenesis
immunogenesis
plague
author_facet L. A. Kadnikova
P. K. Kopylov
S. V. Dentovskaya
A. P. Anisimov
author_sort L. A. Kadnikova
title СAPSULAR ANTIGEN OF YERSINIA PESTIS
title_short СAPSULAR ANTIGEN OF YERSINIA PESTIS
title_full СAPSULAR ANTIGEN OF YERSINIA PESTIS
title_fullStr СAPSULAR ANTIGEN OF YERSINIA PESTIS
title_full_unstemmed СAPSULAR ANTIGEN OF YERSINIA PESTIS
title_sort сapsular antigen of yersinia pestis
publisher Sankt-Peterburg : NIIÈM imeni Pastera
series Infekciâ i Immunitet
issn 2220-7619
2313-7398
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Plague is a zoonosis caused by gram-negative bacteria Yersinia pestis, which, as a rule, is transmitted to humans from septicemic rodents by the bites of infected fleas. This microbe killed more people than all of the wars in the human history. Y. pestis circulation in the natural plague foci is ensured by the whole number of pathogenicity factors with differing functional orientation. This review is devoted to one of them, Y. pestis capsular antigen (F1 or Caf1). The history of its discovery and studying of its genetic control, biosynthesis, isolation and purification, and physicochemical properties are reviewed. Its roles in plague pathogenesis and its application as a main component of plague vaccines are also discussed. Y. pestis capsule under light microscopy is visually amorphous, while high-resolution electron microscopy displays the structure formed from separate fimbria-like cords up to 200 nm long, diverging from the bacterial surface in different directions. At 37°C Y. pestis produce 800–1000 times more capsular antigen than at 28°C. Genes coding for 17.6-kD Caf1 protein, which contains 170 amino acids, are located in caf1 operon of pFra plasmid. Analysis of caf1 operon nucleotide sequence testified its close phylogenetic relationship with the gene clusters coding for pilus adhesins that were secreted with the help of chaperone/usher systems in enterobacteria including six additional adhesins in Y. pestis. Y. pestis multiplication within macrophages is the obligatory stage of plague pathogenesis, and the plague pathogen virulence correlates not with resistance to phagocyte ingesting but with bacterial ability to survive and multiply within phagolysosomes of phagocytes due to neutralization of antibacterial functions of eukaryotic cells. The capsule formed out of the Caf1 aggregates protects Y. pestis from ingestion by naïve host’s phagocytes and prevents from initiation of the alternative pathway of the complement system. Molecular usher Caf1A responsible for capsular antigen anchoring on the surface of bacterial cell has a high affinity to human interleukin 1β. Caf1 can compete with interleukins 1α, 1β, and 1ra in binding to receptors on lymphoid cells preventing development of adequate immune response. Immunodiagnosis of plague is based on detection of Caf1 or anti-Caf1 antibodies since this Y. pestis antigen is species specific. Covering bacterial surfaces capsular antigen is also the paramount component of all modern plague vaccines. Its leading role in induction of intense immunity in mice, rats, monkeys, and men was shown clearly. However, non-capsulated (Caf1–) variants of Y. pestis keeping their virulence at the level of the wild-type strains might be selected and accumulated in immune animals. This indicates inadmissibility of application of monoantigen plague vaccines and necessity for design of immunoprophylactic preparations aimed at two or three molecular targets.
topic yersinia pestis
сapsular antigen
f1
caf1
pathogenicity factor
pathogenesis
immunogenesis
plague
url https://www.iimmun.ru/iimm/article/view/325
work_keys_str_mv AT lakadnikova sapsularantigenofyersiniapestis
AT pkkopylov sapsularantigenofyersiniapestis
AT svdentovskaya sapsularantigenofyersiniapestis
AT apanisimov sapsularantigenofyersiniapestis
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