Demonstration of rare protein in the outer membrane of Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum by freeze-fracture analysis

EM Walker, GA Zampighi, DR Blanco… - Journal of …, 1989 - Am Soc Microbiol
EM Walker, GA Zampighi, DR Blanco, JN Miller, MA Lovett
Journal of bacteriology, 1989Am Soc Microbiol
The surface of Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum (T. pallidum), the etiologic agent of
syphilis, appears antigenically inert and lacks detectable protein, as judged by
immunocytochemical and biochemical techniques commonly used to identify the outer
membrane (OM) constituents of gram-negative bacteria. We examined T. pallidum by freeze-
fracture electron microscopy to visualize the architecture of its OM. Treponema phagedenis
biotype Reiter (T. phagedenis Reiter), a nonpathogenic host-associated treponeme, and …
The surface of Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum (T. pallidum), the etiologic agent of syphilis, appears antigenically inert and lacks detectable protein, as judged by immunocytochemical and biochemical techniques commonly used to identify the outer membrane (OM) constituents of gram-negative bacteria. We examined T. pallidum by freeze-fracture electron microscopy to visualize the architecture of its OM. Treponema phagedenis biotype Reiter (T. phagedenis Reiter), a nonpathogenic host-associated treponeme, and Spirochaeta aurantia, a free-living spirochete, were studied similarly. Few intramembranous particles interrupted the smooth convex and concave fracture faces of the OM of T. pallidum, demonstrating that the OM of this organism is an unusual, nearly naked lipid bilayer. In contrast, the concave fracture face of the OM of S. aurantia was densely covered with particles, indicating the presence of abundant integral membrane proteins, a feature shared by typical gram-negative organisms. The concentration of particles in the OM concave fracture face of T. phagedenis Reiter was intermediate between those of T. pallidum and S. aurantia. Similar to typical gram-negative bacteria, the OM convex fracture faces of the three spirochetes contained relatively few particles. The unique molecular architecture of the OM of T. pallidum can explain the puzzling in vitro properties of the surface of the organism and may reflect a specific adaptation by which treponemes evade the host immune response.
American Society for Microbiology