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1.
Flagellar glycoprotein synthesis and mobilization of flagellar glycoprotein pools have been followed during flagellar regeneration in Euglena. The glycosylation inhibitor tunicamycin has little effect on either regeneration kinetics or the complement of flagellar peptides as seen in SDS acrylamide gels, but tunicamycin totally inhibits incorporation of exogenously supplied [14C]xylose into flagellar glycoproteins. Moreover, deflagellated cells pulsed with tunicamycin for 0 min or more, regenerated for 180 min, and then redeflagellated are completely or partially inhibited from undergoing a second regeneration even when tunicamycin is no longer present. These facts are interpreted as indicating that Euglena retains sufficient glycoprotein pool for one complete flagellar assembly. Some of this pool is present on the cell surface since [125I]-labeled surface peptides can be chased into the regenerating flagellum. Glycosylation may also be taking place in the flagellum directly because [14C]xylose has been found in three flagellar fractions: glycoprotein and two others, which are lipophilic and have properties similar to those described for lipid-carrier glycoprotein intermediates in other systems. Pulse-chase experiments also suggest a precursor-product relationship between the presumptive lipid carriers and flagellar glycoproteins. From these results a model is postulated in which Euglena is visualized as retaining sufficient pool of glycoprotein for one complete flagellar regeneration, but the pool is normally supplemented by active xylosylation in situ during regeneration.  相似文献   

2.
Surface organization and composition of Euglena. II. Flagellar mastigonemes   总被引:6,自引:5,他引:1  
The surface of the Euglena flagellum is coated with about 30,000 fine filaments of two distinct types. The longer of these nontubular mastigonemes (about 3 micron) appear to be attached to the paraflagellar rod whereas the shorter nontubular mastigonemes (about 1.5 micron) are the centrifugally arranged portions of a larger complex, which consists of an attached unit parallel to and outside of the flagellar membrane. Units are arranged laternally in near registration and longitudinally overlap by one-half of a unit length. Rows of mastigoneme units are firmly attached to the axoneme microtubules or to the paraflagellar rod as evidenced by their persistence after removal of the flagellar membrane with neutral detergents. SDS-acrylamide gels of whole flagella revealed about 30 polypeptides, of which two gave strong positive staining with the periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) procedure. At least one of these two bands (glycoproteins) has been equated with the surface mastigonemes by parallel analysis of isolated and purified mastigonemes, particularly after phenol extraction. The faster moving glycoprotein has been selectively removed from whole flagella and from the mastigoneme fraction with low concentrations of neutral detergents at neutral or high pH. The larger glycoprotein was found to be polydisperse when electrophoresed through 1% agarose/SDS gels. Thin-layer chromatography of hydrolysates of whole flagella or of isolated mastigonemes has indicated that the major carbohydrate moiety is the pentose sugar, xylose, with possibly a small amount of glucose and an unknown minor component.  相似文献   

3.
Two carbohydrate-binding probes, the lectin concanavalin A and an anti-carbohydrate monoclonal antibody designated FMG-1, have been used to study the distribution of their respective epitopes on the surface of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, strain pf-18. Both of these ligands bind uniformly to the external surface of the flagellar membrane and the general cell body plasma membrane, although the labeling is more intense on the flagellar membrane. In addition, both ligands cross-react with cell wall glycoproteins. With respect to the flagellar membrane, both concanavalin A and the FMG-1 monoclonal antibody bind preferentially to the principal high molecular weight glycoproteins migrating with an apparent molecular weight of 350,000 although there is, in addition, cross-reactivity with a number of minor glycoproteins. Western blots of V-8 protease digests of the high molecular weight flagellar glycoproteins indicate that the epitopes recognized by the lectin and the antibody are both repeated multiple times within the glycoproteins and occur together, although the lectin and the antibody do not compete for the same binding sites. Incubation of live cells with the monoclonal antibody or lectin at 4 degrees C results in a uniform labeling of the flagellar surface; upon warming of the cells, these ligands are redistributed along the flagellar surface in a characteristic manner. All of the flagellar surface-bound antibody or lectin collects into a single aggregate at the tip of each flagellum; this aggregate subsequently migrates to the base of the flagellum, where it is shed into the medium. The rate of redistribution is temperature dependent and the glycoproteins recognized by these ligands co-redistribute with the lectin or monoclonal antibody. This dynamic flagellar surface phenomenon bears a striking resemblance to the capping phenomenon that has been described in numerous mammalian cell types. However, it occurs on a structure (the flagellum) that lacks most of the cytoskeletal components generally associated with capping in other systems. The FMG-1 monoclonal antibody inhibits flagellar surface motility visualized as the rapid, bidirectional translocation of polystyrene microspheres.  相似文献   

4.
We have measured binding of fluorescein-conjugated succinyl-concanavalin A (Fl-s-Con A) to bloodstream and procyclic forms of Trypanosoma brucei gambiense and to bloodstream forms of T. b. rhodesiense by flow cytofluorimetry. Bloodstream forms bound an order of magnitude less lectin than procyclic forms. Trypsin-treating cells enhanced binding of Fl-s-Con A to bloodstream forms 3-16-fold depending on the strain and the length of trypsinization but had little effect on Fl-s-Con A binding by procyclics. The trypsinization protocol used did not remove major common glycoproteins detected on lectin blots of either life cycle form but removed greater than 95% of the variant specific glycoprotein and fragments derived from this protein of bloodstream forms. Microscopically detectable Fl-s-Con A binding to bloodstream forms was confined to the flagellar pocket. Trypsinized bloodstream forms and procyclics bound Fl-s-Con A in the flagellar pocket, on the flagellum, and on the cell surface. Lectin remained cell associated but appeared to redistribute towards the flagellum and pocket when cells that had bound lectin on ice were subsequently incubated at physiological temperatures. The Fl-s-Con A binding had specificity characteristic of the interaction between the lectin and oligosaccharides. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the variant specific surface glycoprotein blocks binding of the lectin to surface glycoproteins of bloodstream forms and suggest that concanavalin A-binding glycoproteins are abundant in the flagellar pocket of both life cycle forms.  相似文献   

5.
M. Cope  A. R. Hardham 《Protoplasma》1994,180(3-4):158-168
Summary Cryomicrotomy and immunofluorescence microscopy employing three different categories of monoclonal antibody (MAb) that label antigens on the surface of one or both flagella ofPhytophthora dnnamomi have been used to follow the synthesis and assembly of flagellar surface components. MAb Zf 1 binds to the surface of both the anterior tinsel and posterior whiplash flagella, as well as to a nuclear component. The labeling of the flagella is punctate in nature, is brighter at the flagellar base, and does not always extend to the distal tip of the flagella. MAbs in the Zt group recognise an antigen that is located along the sides of the tinsel flagellum and may be associated with the base of the mastigonemes. Immunodot-blot analysis has shown that binding of Zt MAbs is abolished by pretreatment with either pronase or periodate oxidation indicating that the antigen is a glycoprotein. MAbs in the Zg group bind to the mastigonemes on the tinsel flagellum and to packets of mastigonemes in the cytoplasm of zoospores. Zt and Zg antigens increase in abundance during zoosporogenesis and are present throughout the life cycle of the fungus, whereas the non-nuclear localisation of the Zf antigen appears only during sporulation. Prior to association with the flagellar surface, all three components become clustered in the groove region of zoospores. They do not become associated with the flagellar surface until at least 15 min after the flagellar axoneme has formed.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - DMF dimethylformamide - lgG1 immunoglobulin G1 - MAbs monoclonal antibodies - NIM non-immune mouse antibodies - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - PBST phosphate-buffered saline with 0.5% Tween 20 - PIPES 1,4-piperazinediethanesulfonic acid - PPD paraphenylenediamine dihydrochloride - RT room temperature - TBS tris-buffered saline - TEST tris-buffered saline with 0.05% Tween 20  相似文献   

6.
ABSTRACT We have measured binding of fluorescein-conjugated succinyl-concanavalin A (Fl-s-Con A) to bloodstream and procyclic forms of Trypanosoma brucei gambiense and to bloodstream forms of T. b. rhodesiense by flow cytofluorimetry. Bloodstream forms bound an order of magnitude less lectin than procyclic forms. Trypsin-treating cells enhanced binding of Fl-s-Con A to bloodstream forms 3–16-fold depending on the strain and the length of trypsinization but had little effect on Fl-s-Con A binding by procyclics. The trypsinization protocol used did not remove major common glycoproteins detected on lectin blots of either life cycle form but removed >95% of the variant specific glycoprotein and fragments derived from this protein of bloodstream forms. Microscopically detectable Fl-s-Con A binding to bloodstream forms was confined to the flagellar pocket. Trypsinized bloodstream forms and procyclics bound Fl-s-Con A in the flagellar pocket, on the flagellum, and on the cell surface. Lectin remained cell associated but appeared to redistribute towards the flagellum and pocket when cells that had bound lectin on ice were subsequently incubated at physiological temperatures. The Fl-s-Con A binding had specificity characteristic of the interaction between the lectin and oligosaccharides. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the variant specific surface glycoprotein blocks binding of the lectin to surface glycoproteins of bloodstream forms and suggest that concanavalin A-binding glycoproteins are abundant in the flagellar pocket of both life cycle forms.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The role of tubular mastigonemes in the reversal of thrust of the anterior flagellum ofPhytophthora cinnamomi was analysed using mastigoneme-specific monoclonal antibodies and immunoflu-orescence and video microscopy. Exposure of live zoospores ofP. cinnamomi to the mastigoneme-specific Zg antibodies caused alterations in the arrangement of mastigonemes on the flagellar surface and at Zg concentrations above 0.3 /ml, mastigonemes became detached from the flagellum. As a consequence of antibody binding to the mastigonemes there were concentration-dependent perturbations in zoospore swimming behaviour and anterior flagellum beat pattern. With increasing antibody concentration zoospores swam more slowly and other parameters of their swimming pattern, such as the wavelength of the swimming helix and the frequency of rotation, were also reduced. The effects of Zg antibodies were specific at two levels: control immunoglobulins or antibodies that bound to other flagellar surface components did not have an effect on motility, and Zg antibodies did not interfere with the motility of zoospores of oomycete species to which they did not bind. The effects of antibody-induced disruption of mastigoneme arrangement strongly support previous hypotheses that tubular mastigonemes are responsible for thrust reversal by the anterior flagellum, enabling it to pull the cell through the surrounding medium.  相似文献   

8.
Purified flagella from Euglena yield a unique high molecular weight glycoprotein when treated with low concentrations of nonionic detergents. This glycoprotein termed "xyloglycorien" cannot be extracted from other regions of the cell, although a minor component that coextracts with xyloglycorien does have a counterpart in deflagellated cell bodies. Xyloglycorien is tentatively identified with a flagellar surface fuzzy layer that appears in negatively stained membrane vesicles of untreated flagella but not in similar vesicles after Nonidet P-40 extraction. The localization of xyloglycorien is further confirmed to be membrane associated by reciprocal extraction experiments using 12.5 mM lithium diiodosalicylate (LIS), which does not appreciably extract xyloglycorien, visibly solubilize membranes, or remove the fuzzy layer. Rabbit antibodies directed against the two major flagellar glycoproteins (xyloglycorien and mastigonemes) to some extent cross react, which may in part be caused by the large percentage of xylose found by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) analysis to be characteristic of both antigens. However, adsorption of anti- xyloglycorien sera with intact mastigonemes produced antibodies responding only to xyloglycorien, and vice versa, indicating the nonidentity of the two antigens. Antibodies or fragments of these antibodies used in immunofluorescence assays demonstrated that xyloglycorien is confined to the flagellum and possibly the adjacent reservoir and gullet. Binding could not be detected on the cell surface. The sum of these experiments suggests that, in addition to mastigonemes, at least one major membrane glycoprotein in Euglena is restricted to the flagellar domain and is not inserted into the contiguous cell surface region.  相似文献   

9.
Mastigonemes (Flimmer) from the sperm of Ascophyllum and Fucus were found to consist of a tripartite structure—a ca. 2000-A tapered basal region, a closed microtubular shaft, and a group of terminal filaments. Each of these regions appears to be constructed of globular subunits with a center-to-center distance of about 45 A. The mastigoneme microtubule is of smaller diameter (170–190 A) than cytoplasmic microtubules in these or other plant cells. During the initial stages of flagellar ontogeny, structures similar to mastigonemes (presumptive mastigonemes) are found within membrane-limited sacs in the cytoplasm or within the perinuclear space. Mastigonemes at this time are generally not found on the flagellar surface. Later, when the anterior flagellum acquires mastigonemes, the presumptive mastigonemes are absent from the cytoplasm. The regularity of attachment of mastigonemes to the flagellar surface suggests that specific attachment sites are constructed on the plasma membrane during flagellar ontogeny. No evidence for penetration of the mastigoneme through the plasma membrane was obtained. The origin and structure of mastigonemes are discussed in relation to reports of the origin and structure of other microtubular systems.  相似文献   

10.
W. Herth 《Protoplasma》1982,112(1-2):17-25
Summary The chrysoflagellate algaPoterioochromonas bears two unequal flagella. There is a short naked one and a long flagellum with mastigonemes. Ultrastructural investigation reveals that the centralpair microtubules in both flagella have no fixed position with respect to the flagellar base and root system, or the mastigoneme rows in the long flagellum. The central-pair microtubules are twisted several times along the length of the flagellum. This might indicate active or passive rotation of the central-pair microtubules during flagellar beat.  相似文献   

11.
Two carbohydrate-binding probes (the lectin concanavalin A and the anti-carbohydrate monoclonal antibody FMG-1) have been utilized in conjunction with fluorescence-activated cell sorting to select cell lines of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii that contain defects in cell surface-exposed glycoproteins. Two very different selection strategies (sorting cells with the lowest binding for the FMG-1 monoclonal antibody or the highest binding of concanavalin A) yield a class of mutant cells that exhibit a total lack of binding of the monoclonal antibody to cell wall and plasma membrane glycoproteins along with an increased affinity for concanavalin A. Detailed characterization of one such mutant cell line, designated L-23, is provided. The subtle glycosylation defect exhibited by this cell line does not alter the ability of the affected glycoproteins to be targeted to the flagellar membrane and does not affect the expression of flagellar surface motility, a phenomenon that appears to involve the major concanavalin A-binding glycoprotein of the flagellar membrane. This approach has general applicability for dissecting the role of carbohydrate epitopes in the targeting and function of any cell surface glycoprotein for which suitable carbohydrate probes are available.  相似文献   

12.
The organization of two types of nontubular mastigonemes associated with the anterior flagellar surface of the phagotrophic biflagellate Peranema trichophorum (Ehrenberg) Stein is described from studies of thin sections, negative-stained and shadow-cast preparations of both intact and isolated, detergent-treated flagella. Long mastigonemes form a unilateral, spiral array of tufts which curve toward the distal end of the flagellum, while two short mastigoneme ribbons form unequal halves of a bilateral array parallel to the flagellar long axis. Each ribbon is composed of individual overlapping fan-shaped tiers of short mastigonemes interlinked by fine fibrils. A model proposed for Peranema mastigonemes is similar to recent models of mastigoneme organization in Euglena.  相似文献   

13.
Regulation of flagellar glycoprotein movements by protein phosphorylation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Cross-linking of surface exposed domains on certain Chlamydomonas flagellar membrane glycoproteins induces their movement within the plane of the flagellar membrane. A number of observations suggest that active movements of flagellar membrane glycoproteins are associated with the processes of whole cell gliding motility and the early events of fertilization in Chlamydomonas. Protein redistribution is totally inhibited if the free calcium concentration in the medium is 10(-7) M or below or in the presence of a number of calcium channel blockers (Bloodgood, R. A., N. L. Salomonsky, J. Cell Sci. 96, 27-33 (1990]. The present report demonstrates that glycoprotein redistribution in vivo is inhibited reversibly by three different protein kinase inhibitors: H-7, H-8 and staurosporine. Taken together, these observations suggest that the flagellum uses a signaling pathway that involves calcium influx induced by glycoprotein cross-linking, calcium activation of a protein kinase and specific protein phosphorylation to initiate flagellar surface dynamics.  相似文献   

14.
Chlamydomonas flagella exhibit force transduction in association with their surface. This flagellar surface motility is probably used both for whole cell gliding movements (flagella-substrate interaction) and for reorientation of flagella during mating (flagella-flagella interaction). The present study seeks to identify flagellar proteins that may function as exposed adhesive sites coupled to a motor responsible for their translocation in the plane of the plasma membrane. The principal components of the flagellar membrane are a pair of glycoproteins (approximately 350,000 mol wt), with similar mobility on SDS polyacrylamide gels. A rabbit IgG preparation has been obtained which is specific for these two glycoproteins; this antibody preparation binds to and agglutinates cells by their flagellar surfaces only. Treatment of cells with 0.1 mg/ml pronase results in a loss of motility-coupled flagellar membrane adhesiveness. This effect is totally reversible, but only in the presence of new protein synthesis. The major flagellar protein modified by this pronase treatment is the faster migrating of the two high molecular weight glycoproteins; the other glycoprotein does not appear to be accessible to external proteolytic digestion. Loss and recovery of flagella surface binding sites for the specific antibody parallels the loss and recovery of the motility-coupled flagellar surface adhesiveness, as measured by the binding and translocation of polystyrene microspheres. These observations suggest, but do not prove, that the faster migrating of the major high molecular weight flagellar membrane glycoproteins may be the component which provides sites for substrate interaction and couples these sites to the cytoskeletal components responsible for force transduction.  相似文献   

15.
The structure, assembly, and composition of the extracellular hairs (mastigonemes) of Ochromonas are detailed in this report. These mastigonemes form two lateral unbalanced rows, each row on opposite sides of the long anterior flagellum. Each mastigoneme consists of lateral filaments of two distinct sizes attached to a tubular shaft. The shaft is further differentiated into a basal region at one end and a group of from one to three terminal filaments at the free end. Mastigoneme ontogeny as revealed especially in deflagellated and regenerating cells appears to begin by assembly of the basal region and shaft within the perinuclear continuum. However, addition of lateral filaments to the shaft and extrusion of the mastigonemes to the cell surface is mediated by the Golgi complex. The ultimate distribution of mastigonemes on the flagellar surface seems to be the result of extrusion of mastigonemes near the base of the flagellum, and it is suggested that mastigonemes are then pulled up the flagellum as the axoneme elongates. Efforts to characterize mastigonemes biochemically after isolation and purification on cesium chloride (CsCl) followed by electrophoresis on acrylamide gels have demonstrated what appear to be a single major polypeptide and several differentially migrating carbohydrates. The polypeptide is not homologous with microtuble protein. The functionally anomalous role of mastigonemes in reversing flagellar thrust is discussed in relation to their distribution relative to flagellar anatomy and to the plane of flagellar undulations.  相似文献   

16.
The CP-1 antigen of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is a glycoprotein found in the soluble portion of infected cells, in detergent extracts of infected cell membranes, and in the envelope of purified virus. Antisera were prepared against a further purified form of CP-1 prepared from HSV soluble antigen mix; a glycoprotein, gp52, isolated from detergent-treated infected cells; and detergent extracts of purified virus. Each of the antisera reacted with CP-1 to give a single immunoprecipitin band of identity, and each antiserum neutralized the infectivity of HSV-1 and HSV-2. Our results suggested that the type-common determinants involved in the stimulation of neutralizing antibody resided on a 52,000-molecular-weight (52K) glycoprotein. The envelope of HSV contains several glycoproteins: one component at 59K and a complex of two or three components at 130K, none of which corresponds in molecular weight to gp52. Using the antisera as immunological probes, we performed pulse-chase experiments with [(35)S]methionine-labeled HSV-1-infected cells and followed the disposition of the glycoproteins during the infectious cycle. Each antiserum immunoprecipitated a (35)S-labeled 52K protein from lysates of cells pulse-labeled at 5 h after infection. By 10 h, the label was chased into a 59K protein also precipitable by each of the three antisera. The results suggest that gp52 is a precursor of gp59 and that the latter corresponds in molecular weight to one of the major glycoproteins of the virion envelope.  相似文献   

17.
We identified a rat sperm flagellar surface antigen using an IgG1 monoclonal antibody (MC31) against rat epididymal sperm. Avidin-biotin-peroxidase immunohistochemistry demonstrated that the antigen was first expressed in the cytoplasm of early primary spermatocytes, then gradually became restricted to the principal piece of the sperm flagellum during spermatogenesis. However, when the sperm reached the corpus epididymidis, the antigen was expressed on the surface of both the principal piece and the midpiece of the flagellum. The epithelial cells of the epididymis were not stained with MC31. Immunogold electron microscopy showed that the antigen was present on the surface of the sperm flagellar plasma membrane. Immunoblotting of Triton X-100 extracts of epididymal sperm after one-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) under nonreducing conditions demonstrated that MC31 detected a major antigen of 26,000-28,000 daltons (26-28K). Two-dimensional isoelectric focusing and SDS-PAGE indicated that the 26-28K antigen had an isoelectric focusing point (pl) of 5.8-5.3; minor antigens were also detected from 26K (pl 5.8) to 35K (pl 5.0). These results indicate that the antigen recognized by MC31 is an acidic 26-35K protein that originates in the testis, is integrated into the sperm flagellar plasma membrane of the principal piece during spermatogenesis, and then is expressed on the entire flagellar surface during epididymal transit.  相似文献   

18.
The tripartite tubular mastigoneme on the anterior flagellum is a morphological feature that characterizes the stramenopiles. Mastigonemes are significant and potentially informative structures not only from the viewpoint of systematics, but also of cell biology. Nevertheless, few biochemical studies have been reported on stramenopile mastigonemes. The flagella of Scytosiphon lomentaria (Phaeophyceae) were successfully isolated and analyzed using SDS-PAGE followed by protein sequencing. The partial amino acid sequence of one flagellar protein (115kDa) showed high similarity with the sexually induced gene 1 (sig1) product of centric diatoms. A polyclonal antibody against the 115-kDa protein reacted not only to the shaft of mastigonemes in Scytosiphon lomentaria, but also another distinctly different stramenopile flagellate, Sulcochrysis biplastida (Dictyochophyceae). Therefore, we propose that the 115-kDa protein (i.e. Sig1 homologs) is a constituent of the tubular shaft of the mastigoneme.  相似文献   

19.
Cross-linking of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii flagellar membrane glycoproteins results in the directed movements of these glycoproteins within the plane of the flagellar membrane. Three carbohydrate-binding reagents (FMG-1 monoclonal antibody, FMG-3 monoclonal antibody, concanvalin A) that induce flagellar membrane glycoprotein crosslinking and redistribution also induce the specific dephosphorylation of a 60- kD (pI 4.8-5.0) flagellar phosphoprotein (pp60) that is phosphorylated in vivo on serine. Ethanol treatment of live cells induces a similar specific dephosphorylation of pp60. Affinity adsorption of flagellar 32P-labeled membrane-matrix extracts with the FMG-1 monoclonal antibody and concanavalin A demonstrates that pp60 binds to the 350-kD class of flagellar membrane glycoproteins recognized by the FMG-1 monoclonal antibody. In vitro, protein phosphatase 2B (calcineurin) removes 60% of the 32P from pp60; this correlates well with previous observations that directed flagellar glycoprotein movements are dependent on micromolar calcium in the medium and are inhibited by calcium channel blockers and calmodulin antagonists. The data reported here are consistent with the dephosphorylation of pp60 being a step in the signaling pathway that couples flagellar membrane glycoprotein cross-linking to the directed movements of flagellar membrane glycoproteins.  相似文献   

20.
The specificity of adsorbed flagellar antisera for H-antigen was demonstrated in vitro by cross-agglutination assays, motility inhibition, and an ELISA. The specific flagellar antibody was determined to be an IgG. Complete protection against burn wound sepsis was achieved with flagellar antisera. Cross-protection experiments revealed that protection was not only H-antigen dependent, but specific for the flagella antigen type. Antiserum raised against b-type flagella would only protect against homologous bacterial challenge and not against a-type flagellated strains. Results using a-type antisera were consistent, giving protection only against the homologous strain. In contrast, protective capacity was selectively removed from antisera by adsorbing with Fla+ cells. Bacteria colonized the burn wounds of passively protected mice to similar levels as seen in nonprotected animals, but the colonization remained localized and did not result in systemic infection, a pattern similar to infections with motility mutants observed in other studies. Animals rendered neutropenic prior to burning were not protected with flagellar antisera. These data suggested a role for phagocytic cells in protection. Immobilization by flagellar antiserum was observed both by microscopic studies and by inhibition of colony spreading. Antiflagellar antibody is hypothesized as exerting its protective capacity possibly in two ways; first by inhibiting the motility of invading bacteria by binding to the flagellum and immobilizing the bacteria, and secondly by acting as an opsonin, targeting either immobilized or mobile cells for phagocytosis.  相似文献   

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