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The genus Borrelia belongs to the spirochete phylum, an ancient evolutionary branch of the domain bacteria that is only afar related to Gram-negative bacteria. Borreliae can be subdivided into the agents of the two borrelian-caused human diseases, Lyme disease and relapsing fever. Both disease patterns are closely related to the peculiar biology of Borrelia species and exhibit a wide spectrum of diverse clinical manifestations. Due to the small 0.91 Mb chromosome, borreliae have a lack of biosynthetic capacity. Thus, all Borrelia species are highly dependent on nutrients provided by their hosts. The transport of nutrients and other molecules across the outer membrane is enabled by pore-forming proteins, so-called porins. Porins are water-filled channels and can be subdivided into two different classes, general diffusion pores and substrate-specific porins. In terms of the Lyme disease agent Borrelia burgdorferi, three putative porins were characterized in previous studies: P13, Oms28 and P66. In contrast to Lyme disease species, the porin knowledge of relapsing fever Borrelia is low, which means that not any porin has actually been described for representatives of these agents. Thus, the general aim of this thesis was to provide insight into the porin content of both, Lyme disease and relapsing fever spirochetes. This aim could be achieved by isolating and identifying porins from Borrelia outer membranes and by biophysically characterizing them in artificial lipid membranes. In one chapter of this study, the first identification and characterization of a relapsing fever porin is presented. The pore-forming protein was isolated from outer membranes of Borrelia duttonii, Borrelia hermsii and Borrelia recurrentis and designated Oms38, for “outer membrane-spanning protein of 38 kDa”. Biophysical characterization of Oms38 was achieved by using the black lipid bilayer method and demonstrated that Oms38 forms small, water-filled channels with a single-channel conductance of 80 pS in 1 M KCl. The Oms38 channel did not exhibit voltage-dependent closure and is slightly selective for anions with a permeability ratio of cations over anions of 0.41 in KCl. Subsequently, a protein homologous to Oms38 was identified in the Lyme disease agents Borrelia burgdorferi, Borrelia garinii and Borrelia afzelii. The pore-forming protein of these species exhibits high sequence homology to Oms38 and similar biophysical properties, i.e. it forms pores of 50 pS in 1 M KCl. Interestingly, titration experiments revealed that this pore could be partly blocked by dicarboxylic anions, which means that this protein does not form a general diffusion pore but a channel with a binding-site specific for those compounds. Consequently, this porin was termed DipA, for “dicarboxylate-specific porin A”. In another set of experiments, it was shown that the porin P66 is present in both Lyme disease and relapsing fever species. Therefor, the outer membranes of the Lyme disease species Borrelia burgdorferi, Borrelia afzelii, Borrelia garinii and the relapsing fever species Borrelia duttonii, Borrelia recurrentis and Borrelia hermsii were closer investigated. Except of the P66 homologue of Borrelia hermsii P66 of all species was highly active in artificial lipid membranes, forming pores with huge single-channel conductances between 9 and 11 nS in 1 M KCl. Moreover, the channel diameter and the constitution of Borrelia burgdorferi P66 were investigated in detail. Therefor, the P66 single-channel conductance in the presence of different nonelectrolytes with known hydrodynamic radii was analyzed in black lipid bilayers. The effective diameter of the P66 channel lumen was determined to be ~1.9 nm. Furthermore, as derived from multi-channel experiments the P66-induced membrane conductance could be blocked by certain nonelectrolytes, such as PEG 400, PEG 600 and maltohexaose. Additional blocking experiments on the single-channel level revealed seven subconducting states and indicated a heptameric constitution of the P66 channel. This indication could be confirmed by Blue native PAGE analysis which demonstrated that P66 units form a complex with a corresponding mass of approximately 440 kDa. Taking together, this thesis describes detailed biochemical and biophysical investigations of both Lyme disease and relapsing fever Borrelia porins and represents an important step forward in understanding the outer membrane pathways for nutrient uptake of these strictly host-dependent, pathogenic spirochetes. Furthermore, it provides some knowledge of the outer-membrane protein composition of Borrelia spirochetes. A profound knowledge of surface-exposed proteins, such as porins, is one precondition for the production of a successful vaccine and the drug design against the two borrelian-caused diseases.
Best disease, also termed vitelliform macular dystrophy type 2, VMD2, (OMIM #153700), is an autosomal dominant, early onset macular dystrophy associated with a remarkable accumulation of lipofuscin-like material within and beneath the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). The VMD2 gene mutated in Best disease encodes a 585 amino acid putative transmembrane protein named bestrophin, and is preferentially expressed in the RPE. The protein has a complex membrane topology with 4-6 putative transmembrane domains (TMDs) and is presumably involved in Ca2+-dependent transport of chloride ions across the membrane. The vast majority of known disease-associated alterations are missense mutations nonrandomly distributed across the highly conserved N-terminal half of the protein with clusters near the predicted TMDs. The mechanism connecting Best disease pathology with the identified mutations or the Cl- channel function is not yet clear. To further elucidate the biological function of the bestrophin protein and to identify the molecular mechanisms underlying the disease, a search for interacting partners of bestrophin was performed using the GAL4-based yeast two hybrid system (Y2H). Screening of a bovine RPE cDNA library with various truncated bestrophin baits resulted in the identification of 53 putative interacting partners of bestrophin. However, verification of the interaction has excluded all candidate clones. Our comprehensive Y2H analyses suggest that bestrophin may not be suitable for traditional yeast two hybrid screens likely due to the fact that the protein is integral to the membrane and even fragments thereof may not be transported to the nucleus which is, however a prerequisite for protein interaction in the yeast system. Bestrophin belongs to a large family of integral membrane proteins with more than 100 members identified to date originating from evolutionarily diverse organisms such as mammals, insects and worms. The most distinctive feature of the bestrophin family, besides the invariant RFP (arginine-phenylalanine-proline) domain, is an evolutionarily highly conserved N-terminal region. To clarify the phylogenetic relationship among bestrophin homologues and to identify structural and functional motifs conserved across family members, a bioinformatics/phylogenetic study of the conserved N-terminal region was conducted. Phylogenetic analysis of the bestrophin homologues reveals existence of four evolutionary conserved family members in mammals, with high homology to the human VMD2, VMD2-L1 to L3 proteins. The significant level of protein sequence similarity between divergent species suggests that each of the bestrophin family members has a unique, Chapter One: Summary 2 evolutionarily conserved function and that the divergence of bestrophin into several family members occurred before the divergence of individual mammalian species.