Analysis of complement deposition and processing on Chlamydia trachomatis

Chlamydia trachomatis ( C. trachomatis ) is the leading cause of sexually transmitted bacterial infections worldwide, with over 120 million annual cases. C. trachomatis infections are associated with severe reproductive complications in women such as extrauterine pregnancy and tubal infertility. The...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical microbiology and immunology 2021-02, Vol.210 (1), p.13-32
Hauptverfasser: Lausen, Mads, Thomsen, Mikkel Eggert, Christiansen, Gunna, Karred, Nichlas, Stensballe, Allan, Bennike, Tue Bjerg, Birkelund, Svend
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chlamydia trachomatis ( C. trachomatis ) is the leading cause of sexually transmitted bacterial infections worldwide, with over 120 million annual cases. C. trachomatis infections are associated with severe reproductive complications in women such as extrauterine pregnancy and tubal infertility. The infections are often long lasting, associated with immunopathology, and fail to elicit protective immunity which makes recurrent infections common. The immunological mechanisms involved in C. trachomatis infections are only partially understood. Murine infection models suggest that the complement system plays a significant role in both protective immunity and immunopathology during primary Chlamydia infections. However, only limited structural and mechanistic evidence exists on complement-mediated immunity against C. trachomatis . To expand our current knowledge on this topic, we analyzed global complement deposition on C. trachomatis using comprehensive in-depth mass spectrometry-based proteomics. We show that factor B, properdin, and C4b bind to C. trachomatis demonstrating that C. trachomatis -induced complement activation proceeds through at least two activation pathways. Complement activation leads to cleavage and deposition of C3 and C5 activation products, causing initiation of the terminal complement pathway and deposition of C5b, C6, C7, C8, C9 on C. trachomatis . Interestingly, using immunoelectron microscopy, we show that C5b-9 deposition occurred sporadically and only in rare cases formed complete lytic terminal complexes, possibly caused by the presence of the negative regulators vitronectin and clusterin. Finally, cleavage analysis of C3 demonstrated that deposited C3b is degraded to the opsonins iC3b and C3dg and that this complement opsonization facilitates C. trachomatis binding to human B-cells.
ISSN:0300-8584
1432-1831
DOI:10.1007/s00430-020-00695-x