Characterization of the Disulfide Bonds and Free Cysteine Residues of the Chlamydia trachomatis Mouse Pneumonitis Major Outer Membrane Protein

Abstract
Members of the genus Chlamydia lack a peptidoglycan layer. As a substitute for peptidoglycan, it has been proposed that several cysteine rich proteins, including the major outer membrane protein (MOMP), form disulfide bonds to provide rigidity to the cell wall. Alignment of the amino acids sequences of the MOMP from various serovars of Chlamydia showed that they have from 7 to 10 cysteine residues and seven of them are highly conserved. Which of these are free cysteine residues and which are involved in disulfide bonds is unknown. The complexity of the outer membrane of Chlamydia precludes at this point the characterization of the structure of the cysteines directly in the bacteria. Therefore, mass spectrometric analysis of a purified and refolded MOMP was used in this study. Characterization of the structure of this preparation of the MOMP is critical because it has been shown, in an animal model, to be a very effective vaccine against respiratory and genital infections. Here, we demonstrated that in this MOMP preparation four cysteines are involved in disulfide bonds, with intramolecular pairs formed between Cys48 and Cys55 and between Cys201 and Cys203. A stepwise alkylation, reduction, alkylation process using two different alkylating reagents was required to establish the Cys48−Cys55 disulfide pair. The other residues in MOMP, Cys51, Cys136, Cys226, and Cys351, are free cysteines and could potentially form disulfide-linked complexes with other MOMP or other membrane proteins.