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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.
The genus Borrelia belongs to the Spirochaetes phylum which is far related to Gram negative bacteria. This phylum possesses a characteristic long helically coiled shape with lengths that vary from 5 to 250 μm. Other pathogens as Treponema and Leptospira which cause syphilis and leptospirosis, also belong to the Spirochaetes. Borrelia itself is the causative agent of two human diseases, the Lyme disease and relapsing fever. Borreliae are pathogenic bacteria which cycle between their arthropod vector, in most cases a tick, and a mammal host, very often small rodents. This complex life cycle requires an extraordinary protein up- and down-regulation in order to survive in such different organisms and avoid their immunologic systems. Lyme disease is a multisystemic disease that can affect different organs like skin, joints and nervous system. A red rash with concentric rings, called erythema migrans is a distinctive manifestation that allows clinical diagnosis. It appears after the bite of an infected tick and spreads out to diameters that can reach 15 cm. Relapsing fever is characterized by sudden recurrent fever peaks accompanied with chills, headache, muscle and joint pain and nausea. Both diseases are easily treated with antibiotics in early infection stages. Borrelia species possess a small genome. Many of their genes are related with virulence and the adaptation to the different hosts. The absence of genes in Borrelia involved in the biosynthesis of amino acids, fatty acids or nucleotide is very remarkable. This metabolic deficiency makes Borrelia species dependent on substances produced by the host. The first step in nutrient uptake is accomplished by porins. Bacterial porins are water-filled channels that facilitate the transport of essential molecules through the outer membrane. Four porins have been described in Borrelia up to this point. P66, P13 and Oms28 have been found in Borrelia burgdorferi while Oms38 was discovered in relapsing fever spirochetes. P66 is a singular porin with an extremely high single channel conductance of 11 nS. P13 is a small protein with an α-helical secondary structure which does not fit into the general porin model. The function of Oms28 as a porin has been questioned recently due to its periplasmic membrane-associated location. Finally, Oms38 is a specific porin for dicarboxilates with homologues in Lyme disease species. The aim of this thesis was to broaden the knowledge of the P66 and P13 porins described in the genus Borrelia. Both differ in structure and size from the general Gram negative porin model and could be highly involved in specific tasks in the genus Borrelia. In the first project of this thesis, the presence and pore forming capacity of P66 was studied in several Borrelia species including members of the relapsing fever group. P66 is the best studied porin in Borrelia with a dual function as porin and adhesin. This knowledge is restricted to B. burgdorferi and little or nothing is known about homologues in other Borrelia species. Therefore, three Lyme disease and three relapsing fever species were chosen as representative agents of the genus and the pore forming activity of their P66 homologues was studied. Five out of the six homologues exhibited a similar single channel conductance in a range from 9 to 11 nS. All of them showed no selectivity for cations or anions, and they were voltage dependent starting at different voltages from 30 to 70 mV. Only in the case of the B. hermsii homologue no pore forming activity could be established. It remains unclear if the lack of activity was due to an evolutionary loss of its porin function or to a higher sensibility to the detergents used for purification. In another project, the controversial P66 pore diameter of B. burgdorferi was analyzed with an empirical method. In a former study, the diameter of the P66 channel was estimated to be 2.6 nm based on theoretical considerations. This diameter is rather large and could impair the outer membrane protective function. Different non-electrolytes were used to study the P66 pore diameter indicating a 1.8 nm entrance diameter and a 0.8 nm inner constriction. In addition, the blockage of the channel with some of those non-electrolytes disclosed an oligomeric organization formed by approximately eight independent channels. Such a structure has not been observed so far in any other living organism and could be exclusive of Borrelia or spirochetes. The third project of this thesis deal with the recombinant production of a B. burgdorferi protein with immunogenic potential. This protein might be used to develop new diagnosis tests and therapeutic treatments. P13 is an outer membrane protein present in LD and RF species and it does not have any other known bacterial homologue. These facts make of P13 a good candidate to be used as a therapeutic target. For such purpose, P13 was cloned in two organisms. First, in Escherichia coli were two different constructs were designed to establish the role of a periplasmic cleaved C-terminus. Second, in a virus based vector delivered by Agrobacterium tumefaciens into tobacco plant cells. The vector replicates inside the plant cells spreading the infection to adjacent cells and at the same time producing the recombinant protein. This second expression method should enable the production of large amounts of the recombinant protein reducing time and costs. The last project of this thesis looked into the outer membrane complexome of B. burgdorferi focusing on the P13 and P66 porin complexes. Blue Native Page and second dimension SDS Page were the technique chosen for this purpose. P66 could be shown to be the only protein involved in the formation of the 11 nS pore which complex is probably formed by eight monomers. It was also possible to divide this complex in two halves with approximately half the molecular weight and a conductance of 5.5 nS. In the case of the P13 complex, a possible association with the lipoprotein OspC was revealed. The gel extraction of the P13 complex and its test with the Back Lipid Bilayer assay exhibited a 0.6 nS activity. This is in high contrast with the 3.5 nS activity previously described for this protein. To sum up, P66 is a porin present in many Borrelia species including not only LD but also RF species and which homologues show similar biophysical properties. The diameter of this pore is smaller than previously thought and it has molecular weight sieving properties. In the case of P13, its recombinant procurement will allow the use of P13 as a diagnostic and therapeutic target. The possible association with OspC could facilitate to unravel in future experiments the function of this intriguing protein.
In this study pore forming proteins of the gram-negative bacteria B. burgdorferi, B. duttonii and E.coli were investigated. Therefore the study is subdivided into three parts. In the first part outer membrane preparation of three relapsing fever Borrelia were investigated. In the second part the putative TolC homologue BB0124 of B. burgdorferi, the Lyme borreliosis agent, was studied. In the last part the influence of point mutants within the greasy slide of the maltose specific porin (LamB) of E. coli were shown. In the first part of this study outer membrane preparations of three Borrelia relapsing fever strains have been studied for pore-forming activity in the black lipid bilayer assay. Histograms of conductance fluctuations were obtained from single-channel experiments with outer membrane preparations of B. hermsii, B. recurentis and B. duttonii. All strains had a different conductance fluctuation pattern with a broad range of single-channel conductance values varying from 0.5 nS – 11 nS. Common for all three strains was a high pore-forming activity at around 0.5 nS. Furthermore the proteins of the outer membrane of B. duttonii were separated by chromatographic methods. Some eluate fractions contained a channel-forming protein, which was forming stable channels with a single-channel conductance of 80 pS in 1 M KCl. Characterization of this channel showed that it is slightly anionic selective and voltage independent. The small single-channel conductance suggests that it is a specific pore. However, a substrate specificity could not be determined. In the second part, for the B. burgdorferi HB19 and p66 knock out strain HB19/K02, their outer membrane preparations were characterized in the black lipid bilayer assay. Comparing the histograms of single-channel conductions fluctuations of both strains showed no single-channel activity at 11.5 nS for the p66 knock out strain. This verifies earlier studies that P66 is a pore-forming protein in B. burgdorferi. Furthermore, one fraction obtained by anion exchange chromatography of the p66 knock out outer membrane protein preparation showed a uniform channel-forming activity with a single channel conductance of 300 pS. The electrophysically characterization of the 300 pS channel showed that it is not ionselective or voltage dependent. By mass spectrometry using peptide mass finger prints, BB0142 could be identified as the sole channel forming candidate in the active fraction. A BLAST search and a conserved domain search showed that BB0142 is a putative TolC homologue in B. burgdorferi. Furthermore the location of the bb0142 gene within the chromosome is in an operon encoding a multidrug efflux pump. In this study the expression of an outer membrane component of a putative drug efflux system of B. burgdorferi was shown for the first time. In the third part functional studies of the maltooligosaccharide-specific LamB channel were performed. The 3D-structure of LamB suggests that a number of aromatic residues (Y6, Y41, W74, F229, W358 and W420) within the channel lumen is involved in carbohydrate and ion transport. All aromatic residues were replaced by alanine (A) scanning mutagenesis. Furthermore, LamB mutants were created in which one, two, three, four and five aromatic residues were replaced to study their effects on ion and maltopentaose transport through LamB. The purified mutant proteins were reconstituted into lipid bilayer membranes and the single-channel conductance was studied. The results suggest that all aromatic residues provide some steric hindrance for ion transport through LamB. Highest impact is provided by Y6 and Y41, which are localized opposite to Y118, which forms the central constriction of the LamB channel. Stability constants for binding of maltopentaose to the mutant channels were measured using titration experiments with the carbohydrate. The mutation of one or several aromatic amino acids led to a substantial decrease of the stability constant of binding. The highest effect was observed when all aromatic amino acids were replaced by alanine because no binding of maltopentaose could be detected in this case. However, binding was again possible when Y118 was replaced by tryptophane (W). The carbohydrate-induced block of the channel function could also be used for the study of current noise through the different mutant LamB-channels. The analysis of the power density spectra of some of the mutants allowed the evaluation of the on- and off-rate constants (k1 and k-1) of carbohydrate binding to the binding-site inside the channels. The results suggest that both on- and off-rate constants were affected by the mutations. For most mutants k1 decreased and k-1 increased.