4.6 Review

Streptococcal Collagen-like Protein 1 Binds Wound Fibronectin: Implications in Pathogen Targeting

Journal

CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 26, Issue 11, Pages 1933-1945

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/0929867325666180831165704

Keywords

Sel1; adhesins; group A Streptococcus colonization; EDA fibronectin; wound microenvironment; pathogen

Funding

  1. Integrative Graduate Education and Research (IGERT) Traineeship for Research and Education in Nanotoxicology [1144676]
  2. Jennifer Gossling Scholarship in Microbiology
  3. National Institutes of Health [AI50666, AI083683]
  4. West Virginia University HSC Bridge Grant Funding

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Group A Streptococcus (GAS) infections are responsible for significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. The outlook for an effective global vaccine is reduced because of significant antigenic variation among GAS strains worldwide. Other challenges in GAS therapy include the lack of common access to antibiotics in developing countries, as well as allergy to and treatment failures with penicillin and increasing erythromycin resistance in the industrialized world. At the portal of entry, GAS binds to newly deposited extracellular matrix, which is rich in cellular fibronectin isoforms with extra domain A (EDA, also termed EIIIA) via the surface adhesin, the streptococcal collagen-like protein 1 (Scl1). Recombinant Scl1 constructs, derived from diverse GAS strains, bind the EDA loop segment situated between the C and C' beta-strands. Despite the sequence diversity in Scl1 proteins, multiple sequence alignments and secondary structure predictions of Scl1 variants, as well as crystallography and homology modeling studies, point to a conserved mechanism of Scl1-EDA binding. We propose that targeting this interaction may prevent the progression of infection. A synthetic cyclic peptide, derived from the EDA C-C' loop, binds to recombinant Scl1 with a micromolar dissociation constant. This review highlights the current concept of EDA binding to Scl1 and provides incentives to exploit this binding to treat GAS infections and wound colonization.

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