Publications
Characterizing the S-layer structure and anti-S-layer antibody recognition on intact Tannerella forsythia cells by scanning probe microscopy and small angle X-ray scattering
- Author(s)
- Yoo Jin Oh, Gerhard Sekot, Memed Duman, Lilia Chtcheglova, Paul Messner, Herwig Peterlik, Christina Schaeffer, Peter Hinterdorfer
- Abstract
Tannerella forsythia is among the most potent triggers of periodontal diseases, and approaches to understand underlying mechanisms are currently intensively pursued. A ~22-nm-thick, 2D crystalline surface (S-) layer that completely covers Tannerella forsythia cells is crucially involved in the bacterium–host cross-talk. The S-layer is composed of two intercalating glycoproteins (TfsA-GP, TfsB-GP) that are aligned into a periodic lattice. To characterize this unique S-layer structure at the nanometer scale directly on intact T. forsythia cells, three complementary methods, i.e., small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), atomic force microscopy (AFM), and single-molecular force spectroscopy (SMFS), were applied. SAXS served as a difference method using signals from wild-type and S-layer-deficient cells for data evaluation, revealing two possible models for the assembly of the glycoproteins. Direct high-resolution imaging of the outer surface of T. forsythia wild-type cells by AFM revealed a p4 structure with a lattice constant of ~9.0 nm. In contrast, on mutant cells, no periodic lattice could be visualized. Additionally, SMFS was used to probe specific interaction forces between an anti-TfsA antibody coupled to the AFM tip and the S-layer as present on T. forsythia wild-type and mutant cells, displaying TfsA-GP alone. Unbinding forces between the antibody and wild-type cells were greater than with mutant cells. This indicated that the TfsA-GP is not so strongly attached to the mutant cell surface when the co-assembling TfsB-GP is missing. Altogether, the data gained from SAXS, AFM, and SMFS confirm the current model of the S-layer architecture with two intercalating S-layer glycoproteins and TfsA-GP being mainly outwardly oriented.
- Organisation(s)
- Dynamics of Condensed Systems
- External organisation(s)
- Johannes Kepler Universität Linz, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Hacettepe University, Center for Advanced Bioanalysis GmbH
- Journal
- Journal of Molecular Recognition
- Volume
- 26
- Pages
- 542-549
- No. of pages
- 8
- ISSN
- 0952-3499
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jmr.2298
- Publication date
- 11-2013
- Peer reviewed
- Yes
- Austrian Fields of Science 2012
- 106006 Biophysics, 106023 Molecular biology, 106022 Microbiology
- Keywords
- Portal url
- https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/characterizing-the-slayer-structure-and-antislayer-antibody-recognition-on-intact-tannerella-forsythia-cells-by-scanning-probe-microscopy-and-small-angle-xray-scattering(f57bbe99-2558-4e30-9365-988a9bcb1464).html