Immunization with lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase CbpD induces protective immunity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31036Date
2023-07-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Askarian, Fatemeh; Tsai, Chih-Ming; Cordara, Gabriele; Zurich, Raymond H.; Bjånes, Elisabet; Golten, Ole; Sørensen, Henrik Vinther; Kousha, Armin; Meier, Angela; Chikwati, Elvis Mashingaidze; Bruun, Jack-Ansgar; Ludviksen, Judith K; Choudhury, Biswa; Trieu, Desmond; Davis, Stanley; Edvardsen, Per Kristian Thorén; Mollnes, Tom Eirik; Liu, George Y.; Krengel, Ute; Conrad, Douglas J.; Vaaje-Kolstad, Gustav; Nizet, VictorAbstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) CbpD belongs to the lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases
(LPMOs), a family of enzymes that cleave chitin or related polysaccharides. Here, we
demonstrate a virulence role of CbpD in PA pneumonia linked to impairment of host
complement function and opsonophagocytic clearance. Following intratracheal challenge, a PA ΔCbpD mutant was more easily cleared and produced less mortality than
the wild-type parent strain. The x-ray crystal structure of the CbpD LPMO domain
was solved to subatomic resolution (0.75Å) and its two additional domains modeled
by small-angle X-ray scattering and Alphafold2 machine-learning algorithms, allowing
structure-based immune epitope mapping. Immunization of naive mice with recombinant CbpD generated high IgG antibody titers that promoted human neutrophil
opsonophagocytic killing, neutralized enzymatic activity, and protected against lethal PA
pneumonia and sepsis. IgG antibodies generated against full-length CbpD or its noncatalytic M2+CBM73 domains were opsonic and protective, even in previously PA-exposed
mice, while antibodies targeting the AA10 domain were not. Preexisting antibodies in
PA-colonized cystic fibrosis patients primarily target the CbpD AA10 catalytic domain.
Further exploration of LPMO family proteins, present across many clinically important
and antibiotic-resistant human pathogens, may yield novel and effective vaccine antigens.
Publisher
National Academy of ScienceCitation
Askarian, Tsai, Cordara, Zurich, Bjånes, Golten, Sørensen, Kousha, Meier, Chikwati, Bruun, Ludviksen, Choudhury, Trieu, Davis, Edvardsen, Mollnes, Liu, Krengel, Conrad, Vaaje-Kolstad, Nizet. Immunization with lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase CbpD induces protective immunity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 2023;120(30)Metadata
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