The ferric binding protein (FbpA) is one of the major proteins regulated by
the level of environmental iron in the genus Neisseria. Its conservation i
n air species of pathogenic Neisseria has been demonstrated, and the possib
le role that it plays in the iron uptake mechanisms in these bacteria has b
een postulated. Similar proteins in Haemophilus influenzae (HitA) and in Se
rratia marcescens (SfuA) have been described, but relationships with the me
ningococcal FbpA could not be proven. Although supposedly periplasmic, the
exact location of FbpA remains controversial because some molecules, or par
ts of them, have been found exposed to the bacterial outer surface. The DNA
sequence downstream of the fbpA gene has been recently analysed, finding a
n operon composed of three open reading frames: fbpA, encoding for FbpA; fb
pB, that codifies a cytoplasmic permease, and fbpC, that contains the infor
mation for a nucleotide binding protein. These proteins would form an iron
transport system through the periplasmic space. FbpA is highly antigenic in
mice when injected in purified form, shows intraspecies and interspecies a
ntigenic homogenicity, and specific anti-FbpA antibodies are fully cross-re
active; nevertheless, the in vivo induction of anti-FbpA antibodies in man
is still polemical. Recent studies reveal that the purified FbpA induces a
fair response of bactericidal antibodies in mice. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science
Inc. Al rights reserved.