Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Apr 2023)

LIC12254 Is a Leptospiral Protein That Interacts with Integrins via the RGD Motif

  • Maria F. Cavenague,
  • Aline F. Teixeira,
  • Luis G. V. Fernandes,
  • Ana L. T. O. Nascimento

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8050249
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. 249

Abstract

Read online

Pathogenic leptospires can bind to receptors on mammalian cells such as cadherins and integrins. Leptospira effectively adheres to cells, overcomes host barriers and spreads into the bloodstream, reaching internal target organs such as the lungs, liver and kidneys. Several microorganisms produce proteins that act as ligands of integrins through the RGD motif. Here, we characterized a leptospiral RGD-containing protein encoded by the gene lic12254. In silico analysis of pathogenic, intermediate and saprophytic species showed that LIC12254 is highly conserved among pathogenic species, and is unique in presenting the RGD motif. The LIC12254-coding sequence is greatly expressed in the virulent Leptospira interrogans L1-130 strain compared with the culture-attenuated L. interrogans M20 strain. We also showed that the recombinant protein rLIC12254 binds to αVβ8 and α8 human integrins most likely via the RGD motif. These interactions are dose-dependent and saturable, a typical property of receptor–ligand interactions. The binding of the recombinant protein lacking this motif—rLIC12254 ΔRAA—to αVβ8 was almost totally abolished, while that with the α8 human integrin was decreased by 65%. Taken together, these results suggest that this putative outer membrane protein interacts with integrins via the RGD domain and may play a key role in leptospirosis pathogenesis.

Keywords