Novel Type 1 Pilus Receptors in Pyelonephritis and Recurrent UTI

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $393,750 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT Bacterial adhesion to the urinary tract epithelium is a critical step in establishing urinary tract infections. During infection of the mammalian bladder (cystitis), uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) are well described to employ type 1 pili, bearing the tip adhesin FimH, to bind oligomannose-decorated uroplakins that coat the luminal surfaces of superficial bladder epithelial cells. However, less detail is known about host-pathogen interactions in the kidney that enable initiation of upper-tract UTIs, including pyelonephritis and renal abscess. We have found that type 1 pili, previously thought to be essential only in cystitis, also mediate establishment of pyelonephritis and the initiation of renal abscesses in C3H mice. Furthermore, in an in vitro model of UPEC binding to renal collecting duct epithelium, we identified a candidate renal epithelial receptor for FimH, namely the mannosylated cell-junctional protein desmoglein-2 (Dsg2). This protein is expressed throughout the nephron but most highly in collecting duct epithelium, and bears typical N-linked mannose-containing glycans as well as cadherin family-specific O-linked mannosylation. In this project, we will test the central hypothesis that desmoglein-2 is an epithelial receptor for FimH that mediates establishment of UPEC pyelonephritis and can bind FimH in gut and exfoliated bladder. First, we will use multiple genetic and pharmacologic systems to interrogate the importance of FimH binding to mannosylated Dsg2 in recently published, optimized mouse models of UPEC pyelonephritis. Among these systems will be newly generated C3H mice carrying renal epithelial-specific deletion of Dsg2. Next, we will quantify the binding affinity of the FimH lectin domain to the purified extracellular domain of human DSG2 by SPR, and co-crystallize the relevant FimH and DSG2 domains to reveal the structural basis for the DSG2-FimH interaction. Controls in these experiments will include FimHQ133K, which carries a mutation that abrogates mannose binding; mannosides, high-affinity small-molecule inhibitors of FimH binding; enzymatic pre-treatment of purified protein and kidney tissue sections to eliminate N- or O-linked glycans; and monoclonal antibodies generated against the key DSG2 peptides mediating interaction with FimH. Third, desmoglein-2 is also expressed widely on other epithelial cell types (in both humans and mice), raising the added possibility that it binds FimH in other niches relevant to UTI pathogenesis. These include the bladder after exfoliation (a rapid response to initial UPEC infection that eliminates the primary FimH receptor) and the colon (which serves as a UPEC reservoir to seed recurrent UTI). Therefore, we will use mouse and human tissue sections, an in vivo gut colonization model, and additional new conditional Dsg2 knockout mice to investigate whether Dsg2 can serve as a FimH receptor in these tissues. At the conclusion of these studies, we will have ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10828889
Project number
5R01AI158418-04
Recipient
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
DAVID HUNSTAD
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$393,750
Award type
5
Project period
2021-04-01 → 2026-03-31