Infectivity ofChlamydia trachomatisSerovar LGV but Not E Is Dependent on Host Cell Heparan Sulfate
Open Access
- 1 February 2001
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 69 (2) , 968-976
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.69.2.968-976.2001
Abstract
The ability of heparan sulfate, heparin, and other glycosaminoglycans to inhibit the infectivity ofChlamydia trachomatisserovars E and LGV was examined using a simple competitive inhibition assay with three cell types from the human female reproductive tract, including primary human endosalpingeal cells. With the majority of the glycosaminoglycans tested, LGV was more significantly inhibited than serovar E. We have compared chlamydial infectivity between a wild-type Chinese hamster ovary cell line and two glycosaminoglycan-deficient cell lines. LGV was shown to be unable to infect heparan sulfate-deficient and GAG-deficient Chinese hamster ovary cell lines, whereas the E serovar infected these cells as efficiently as the control (nondeficient) cells. These two sets of experiments confirmed that serovar LGV is more dependent on a heparan sulfate-related mechanism of infectivity than is serovar E. This is further supported by the fact that attempts to purify a heparan sulfate-like molecule from either serovar cultured in glycosaminoglycan-deficient cell lines were nonproductive. Previous reports have suggested that chlamydia are able to produce a heparan sulfate-like molecule that is important for attachment and infectivity. We have attempted to detect possible binding of a specific heparan sulfate antibody toC. trachomatisby flow cytometry. Results showed no binding of the heparan sulfate antibody toC. trachomatisserovar LGV or E. Our results strongly indicate that chlamydiae do not produce a heparan sulfate-like molecule but rather use host cell heparan sulfate in order to infect cells.Keywords
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