Treponema denticola, a keystone pathogen in periodontitis, is a model organism for studying Treponema physiology and host-microbe interactions. Its major surface protein Msp forms an oligomeric outer membrane complex that binds fibronectin, has cytotoxic pore-forming activity, and disrupts several intracellular processes in host cells. T. denticola msp is an ortholog of the Treponema pallidum tprA to -K gene family that includes tprK, whose remarkable in vivo hypervariability is proposed to contribute to T. pallidum immune evasion. We recently identified the primary Msp surface-exposed epitope and proposed a model of the Msp protein as a β-barrel protein similar to Gram-negat... More
Treponema denticola, a keystone pathogen in periodontitis, is a model organism for studying Treponema physiology and host-microbe interactions. Its major surface protein Msp forms an oligomeric outer membrane complex that binds fibronectin, has cytotoxic pore-forming activity, and disrupts several intracellular processes in host cells. T. denticola msp is an ortholog of the Treponema pallidum tprA to -K gene family that includes tprK, whose remarkable in vivo hypervariability is proposed to contribute to T. pallidum immune evasion. We recently identified the primary Msp surface-exposed epitope and proposed a model of the Msp protein as a β-barrel protein similar to Gram-negative bacterial porins. Here, we report fine-scale Msp mutagenesis demonstrating that both the N and C termini as well as the centrally located Msp surface epitope are required for native Msp oligomer expression. Removal of as few as three C-terminal amino acids abrogated Msp detection on the T. denticola cell surface, and deletion of four residues resulted in complete loss of detectable Msp. Substitution of a FLAG tag for either residues 6 to 13 of mature Msp or an 8-residue portion of the central Msp surface epitope resulted in expression of full-length Msp but absence of the oligomer, suggesting roles for both domains in oligomer formation. Consistent with previously reported Msp N-glycosylation, proteinase K treatment of intact cells released a 25 kDa polypeptide containing the Msp surface epitope into culture supernatants. Molecular modeling of Msp using novel metagenome-derived multiple sequence alignment (MSA) algorithms supports the hypothesis that Msp is a large-diameter, trimeric outer membrane porin-like protein whose potential transport substrate remains to be identified. IMPORTANCE The Treponema denticola gene encoding its major surface protein (Msp) is an ortholog of the T. pallidum tprA to -K gene family that includes tprK, whose remarkable in vivo hypervariability is proposed to contribute to T. pallidum immune evasion. Using a combined strategy of fine-scale mutagenesis and advanced predictive molecular modeling, we characterized the Msp protein and present a high-confidence model of its structure as an oligomer embedded in the outer membrane. This work adds to knowledge of Msp-like proteins in oral treponemes and may contribute to understanding the evolutionary and potential functional relationships between T. denticola Msp and the orthologous T. pallidum Tpr proteins.