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1.
We generated a panel of mAb containing at least one specificity against each of the known chemotypes of the Salmonella LPS core domain and used them to investigate the accessibility of core determinants in smooth LPS. Most of the mAb were reactive with at the most three chemotypes of the core as determined by enzyme immunoassay and failed to bind smooth LPS or any of the complete cores of E. coli. One mAb, MASC1-MM3 (MM3), reacted with six different Salmonella core chemotypes, the R2 core of Escherichia coli and a variety of smooth LPS. This mAb reacted equally well with live and heat-killed bacteria. It bound to 123 of 126 clinical isolates of Salmonella and 11 of 73 E. coli strains in a dot-immunoblot assay. Typical ladder-like patterns of bands were observed after immunoblotting of this mAb against electrophoretically resolved smooth LPS from the five major serogroups of Salmonella species (A, B, C1, D1, and E). MM3 had no reactivity with BSA conjugates of O-Ag polysaccharides from the above serogroups confirming specificity for a core epitope. Polysaccharides derived from or synthetic saccharides representative of the various chemotypes of Salmonella LPS core were tested as competitive inhibitors of the binding of MM3 to LPS. The results led to a conclusion that MM3 recognizes the structure, L-alpha-D-Heptose1-->7-L-alpha-D-Heptose1-->disaccharide present as a branch in the Ra, Rb1, Rb2, Rb3 and Rc but lacking in the Rd1, Rd2, and Re chemotypes of the Salmonella LPS core. This disaccharide seems free and accessible on the basis of the previously calculated conformations of the Salmonella (Ra) and E. coli complete cores (R1, R2, R3, R4, and K12). It therefore defines or contains an epitope within the inner core subdomain of Salmonella LPS that is accessible to antibody in long-chained LPS and in intact bacteria with complete LPS.  相似文献   

2.
A comparative study of the lipopolysaccharides (LPS) isolated from Sinorhizobium meliloti SKHM 1-188 and two its LPS-mutants (Th29 and Ts22) with sharply decreased nodulation competitiveness was conducted. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with sodium dodecyl sulfate revealed two forms of LPS in all the three strains: a higher molecular-weight LPS1, containing O-polysaccharide (O-PS), and a and lower molecular-weight LPS2 without O-PS. However, the LPS1 content in mutants was significantly smaller than in the parent strain. The LPS of the strains studied contained glucose, galactose, mannose, xylose, three nonidentified sugars--X1 (TGlc 0.53), X2 (TGlc 0.47), and X3 (TGlc 0.43), glucosamine, and ethanolamine, while the LPS of S. meliloti SKHM1-188 additionally contained galactosamine, glucuronic and galacturonic acids, and 2-keto-3-deoxyoctulosonic acid (KDO), as well as fatty acids, such as 3-OH C14:0, 3-OH C15:0, 3-OH C16:0, 3-OH C18:0, nonidentified hydroxy X (T3-OH C14:0 1.33), C18:0, and unsaturated C18:1 fatty acids. The LPS of both mutants were similar in the component composition but differed from the LPS of the parent strain by a lower X2, X3, and 3-OH C 14:0 content and a higher KDO, C18:0, and hydroxy X content. The LPS of all the strains were subjected to mild hydrolysis with 1% acetic acid and fractionated on a column with Sephadex G-25. The higher molecular weight fractions (2500-4000 Da) contained a set of sugars typical of intact LPS and, supposedly, corresponded to the LPS polysaccharide portion (PS1). In the lower molecular weight fractions (600-770 Da, PS2), glucose and uronic acids were the major components; galactose, mannose, and X1 were present in smaller amounts. The PS1/PS2 ratio for the two mutants was significantly lower than for strain SKHM1-188. The data obtained show that the amount of O-PS-containing molecules (LPS1) in the heterogeneous lipopolysaccharide complex of the mutants was smaller than in the SKHM1-188 LPS; this increases the hydrophobicity of the cell surface of the mutant bacteria. This supposedly contributes to their nonspecific adhesion on the roots of the host plant, thus decreasing their nodulation competitiveness.  相似文献   

3.
Mutants with defective lipopolysaccharides (LPSs) were isolated from Pseudomonas aeruginosa PACIR (Habs serogroup 3) by selection for resistance to aeruginocin from P. aeruginosa PI6 Carbenicillin-sensitive mutants were isolated from P. aeruginosa PACI but not all had defective LPSs. Rough colonial morphology and resistance to bacteriophage II9X appeared to be independent of LPS composition. The LPSs from five mutants were analysed and compared with that of the parent strain. Separation of partially-degraded polysaccharides from LPS from PACI on Sephadex G75 yielded two different high molecular weight fractions and a phosphorylated low molecular weight fraction (L). The mutant LPSs lacked most or all of the high molecular weight fractions but retained some low molecular weight material. That from PACI and two of the mutants was separated by elution from Biogel P6 into two fractions. One, L2, was the core polysaccharide while the other, LI, contained short antigenic side-chains attached to the core like the semi-rough (SR) LPSs of the Enterobacteriaceae. The two mutants which gave the LI fraction with Habs 3 and PACI antisera as did the parent strain. The other three mutants were unreactive and their LPSs contained core components only. One appeared to have a complete core while the other two lacked rhamnose and rhammose plus glucose respectively. Thus there may be four types of LPS in PACI: one contains unsubstituted core polysaccharide and yields L2 on acid hydrolysis, another has short antigenic side-chains of the SR type and yields the LI fraction, while the two high molecular weight fractions are derived from core polysaccharides with different side-chains.  相似文献   

4.
The morphological heterogeneity of lipopolysaccharides (LPSs) among salmonella mutants with different LPS chemotypes was analyzed in silver-stained polyacrylamide gels. The biochemical differences in the LPS chemotypes were reflected in the unique profiles of the purified LPSs. The LPS profiles in the whole-cell lysates were also unique for each chemotype. (Whole-cell lysates were assessed by a method which preferentially silver stains LPS and by a proteinase K digest of whole-cell lysates. The silver-stained LPS profiles of proteinase K-digested lysates were similar to the homologous purified LPS and could be used to preliminarily characterize the LPS chemotype before purification.) In summary, biochemical variation in LPS composition can be detected in silver-stained polyacrylamide gels.  相似文献   

5.
Kosenko  L. V.  Zatovskaya  T. V. 《Microbiology》2004,73(3):292-299
A comparative study of the lipopolysaccharides (LPS) isolated from Sinorhizobium meliloti SKHM1-188 and two of its LPS mutants (Tb29 and Ts22) with sharply decreased nodulation competitiveness was conducted. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with sodium dodecyl sulfate revealed two forms of LPS in all three strains: a higher molecular weight LPS1, containing O-polysaccharide (O-PS), and a lower molecular weight LPS2, without O-PS. However, the LPS1 content in mutants was significantly smaller than in the parent strain. The LPS of the strains studied contained glucose, galactose, mannose, xylose, three nonidentified sugars (X 1 (TGlc 0.53), X 2 (TGlc 0.47), and X 3 (TGlc 0.43)), glucosamine, and ethanolamine, while the LPS of S. meliloti SKHM1-188 additionally contained galactosamine, glucuronic and galacturonic acids, and 2-keto-3-deoxyoctulosonic acid (KDO), as well as such fatty acids as 3-OH C14:0, 3-OH C15:0, 3-OH C16:0, 3-OH C18:0, nonidentified hydroxy X (T3-OH C14:0 1.33), C18:0, and unsaturated C18:1 fatty acids. The LPS of both mutants were similar in the component composition but differed from the LPS of the parent strain by lower X 2, X 3, and 3-OH C14:0 contents and higher KDO, C18:0, and hydroxy X contents. The LPS of all the strains were subjected to mild hydrolysis with 1% acetic acid and fractionated on a column with Sephadex G-25. The higher molecular weight fractions (2500–4000 Da) contained a set of sugars typical of intact LPS and, supposedly, corresponded to the LPS polysaccharide portion (PS1). In the lower molecular weight fractions (600–770 Da, PS2), glucose and uronic acids were the major components; galactose, mannose, and X 1 were present in smaller amounts. The PS1/PS2 ratio for the two mutants was significantly lower than for strain SKHM1-188. The data obtained show that the amount of O-PS–containing molecules (LPS1) in the heterogeneous lipopolysaccharide complex of the mutants was smaller than in the SKHM1-188 LPS; this increases the hydrophobicity of the cell surface of the mutant bacteria, which supposedly contributes to their nonspecific adhesion to the roots of the host plant, thus decreasing their nodulation competitiveness.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract The lipopolysaccharide and porin profile of Escherichia coli ATCC 25922, a smooth strain commonly used in antibiotic susceptibility testing, and five isogenic rough mutants was examined. The lipopolysaccharide of the parent strain had the characteristic ladder pattern on polyacrylamide gels, while that of the mutants appeared similar to chemotypes Ra and Rc of Salmonella typhimurium with some changes in chemical composition. Of the porins, OmpC appeared markedly reduced in the parent strain while OmpF appeared markedly reduced in the mutants. In addition, a new outer-membrane protein of size intermediate to that of OmpC and OmpF was detected in all mutants. Neither parent nor mutants were susceptible to the LPS core-specific P1 phage or the porin-specific PA2 and K20 phages.  相似文献   

7.
Lipopolysaccharides (LPS, O-antigens) of 12 strains of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas gelatinosa were obtained by the phenol/chloroform/petroleum ether method, recommended for extracting lipophilic glycolipids of enterobacterial R-mutants. All R. gelatinosa LPS have essentially the same chemical composition. Similar to LPS of Salmonella R-mutants of chemotypes Rd1 and Rd2, the sole neutral sugar constituent is an aldoheptose. The heptose of R. gelatinosa LPS has the D-glycero-D-manno- configuration, in contrast to the L-glycero-D-mannoheptose of enterobacterial LPS. 2-Keto-3-deoxyoctonate forms the acid-labile linkage between the lipid moiety (lipid A) and the oligosaccharide moiety of R. gelatinosa LPS. Like enterobacterial lipid A, lipid A of this species contains phosphate and D-glucosamine as the sole amino sugar. The fatty acid spectrum conprises beta-hydroxycapric, lauric, and myristic acids. Beta-Hydroxymyristic acid, the typical fatty acid of enterobacterial LPS, is lacking. The R. gelatinosa LPS show O-antigenic acitivity; passive hemagglutinations with untreated or heat-treated (not well alkali-treated) LPS and antisera prepared against heat-killed cells yield high titers. According to the serological cross-reactions observed, the LPS of the 12 strains could be arranged into two different serotypes: serotype I comprising strains 29/1, 29/2, 25/2, and serotype II comprising strains 44/K/6, 3/1, IS/10, 39/2, Dr2, 2150, P8P9, K32, P18f3.1. No serological cross-reactions were observed between LPS of these two different serotypes in passive hemagglutinations.  相似文献   

8.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-defective mutants of Pseudomonas solanacearum were used to test the hypothesis that differences in LPS structure are associated with the ability or inability of different strains to induce a hypersensitive response (HR) in tobacco. To obtain these mutants, LPS-specific bacteriophage of P. solanacearum were isolated and used to select phage-resistant mutants of the virulent, non-HR-inducing strain K60. The LPS of 24 of these mutants was purified and compared with that of K60 and its HR-inducing variant, B1. Upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, LPS from K60 and other smooth strains separated into many evenly spaced bands that migrated slowly, whereas LPS from B1 and most phage-resistant strains separated into one to three bands that migrated rapidly. Carbohydrate analysis showed that the LPS of the phage-resistant strains lacked O-antigen sugars (rhamnose, xylose, and N-acetylglucosamine) and could be grouped into (i) those that had all core sugars (rhamnose, glucose, heptose, and 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate), (ii) those that had no core rhamnose, and (iii) those that lacked all core sugars except for 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate. The LPS composition of 10 of the rough, phage-resistant mutants was similar to that of the HR-inducing strain, B1, yet none of them induced the HR. Only 2 of 13 mutant strains tested caused wilting of tobacco, and these had rough LPS but produced large amounts of extracellular polysaccharide, unlike most LPS-defective mutants. The evidence did not support the hypothesis that the initial interaction between rough LPS and tobacco cell walls is the determining factor in HR initiation.  相似文献   

9.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of the Pseudomonas fluorescens strain IMV 7769 (biovar I) was isolated and investigated. Fractions of the structural parts of the LPS macromolecule, lipid A, the core oligosaccharide, and the O-specific polysaccharide (O-PS), were obtained in a homogeneous state. 2-Hydroxydecanoic, 3-hydroxydecanoic, dodecanoic, 2-hydroxydodecanoic, 3-hydroxydodecanoic, hexadecanoic, octadecanoic, hexadecenoic, and octadecenoic fatty acids were identified in lipid A. In the hydrophilic moiety of lipid A, after acid hydrolysis, several amino acids, phosphoethanolamine, glucosamine, and three unidentified peaks forming a separate cluster together with glucosamine were found. Lipid A was shown to be phosphorylated. Glucose, fucose, rhamnose, glucosamine, galactosamine, two unidentified amino sugars, 2-keto-3-deoxyoctulonic acid (KDO), heptose, ethanolamine, phosphoethanolamine, and alanine were identified in the core oligosaccharide. O-PS of the LPS consisted of repeating trisaccharide fragments that included residues of amino sugars: 4-acetamido-4,6-dideoxy-D-galactose, 2-acetamido-2,6-dideoxy-D-glucose, and 2-acetamido-2,6-dideoxy-L-glucose. During growth, the strain under study excreted exocellular LPS (ELPS) into the medium. The LPS studied was similar to the LPS of the earlier investigated strains P. fluorescens (biovar I) IMV 1152 and IMV 1433 in the structure of O-PS, but differed from them in the composition of both lipid A and the core oligosaccharide. The LPS of the strain studied differed from LPS of the type strain P. fluorescens IMV 4125 (ATCC 13525) in all characteristics determined.  相似文献   

10.
The lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from a Rhizobium phaseoli mutant, CE109, was isolated and compared with that of its wild-type parent, CE3. A previous report has shown that the mutant is defective in infection thread development, and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows that it has an altered LPS (K. D. Noel, K. A. VandenBosch, and B. Kulpaca, J. Bacteriol. 168:1392-1462, 1986). Mild acid hydrolysis of the CE3 LPS released a polysaccharide and an oligosaccharide, PS1 and PS2, respectively. Mild acid hydrolysis of CE109 LPS released only an oligosaccharide. Chemical and immunochemical analyses showed that CE3-PS1 is the antigenic O chain of this strain and that CE109 LPS does not contain any of the major sugar components of CE3-PS1. CE109 oligosaccharide was identical in composition to CE3-PS2. The lipid A's from both strains were very similar in composition, with only minor quantitative variations. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of CE3 and CE109 LPSs showed that CE3 LPS separated into two bands, LPS I and LPS II, while CE109 had two bands which migrated to positions similar to that of LPS II. Immunoblotting with anti-CE3 antiserum showed that LPS I contains the antigenic O chain of CE3, PS1. Anti-CE109 antiserum interacted strongly with both CE109 LPS bands and CE3 LPS II and interacted weakly with CE3 LPS I. Mild-acid hydrolysis of CE3 LPS I, extracted from the polyacrylamide gel, showed that it contained both PS1 and PS2. The results in this report showed that CE109 LPS consists of only the lipid A core and is missing the antigenic O chain.  相似文献   

11.
Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) were isolated from the crude bacterial mass of the Pseudomonas syringae pv. maculicola IMV 381 collection culture and its virulent and avirulent subcultures isolated earlier from the heterogeneous collection culture due to its natural variability during long-term storage. The composition, immunochemical properties, and certain parameters of the biological activity of the LPS preparations obtained were studied. The structural parts of the LPS macromolecule--lipid A, the core oligosaccharide, and O-specific polysaccharide (OPS)--were isolated and characterized. The following fatty acids were identified in the lipid A composition of all cultures: 3-OH-C10:0, C12:0, 2-OH-C12:0, 3-OH-C12:0, C16:1, C16:0, C18:1, and C18:0. Glucosamine (GlcN), ethanolamine (EtN), phosphoethanolamine (EtN-P), and phosphorus (P) were revealed in the hydrophilic portion of the macromolecule. In the core portion of the LPS macromolecule, glucose (Glc), rhamnose (Rha), GlcN, galactosamine (GalN), 2-keto-3-deoxyoctulosonic acid (KDO), alanine (Ala), and P were found. The peculiarities of the structure of LPS isolated from the stable collection culture (LPS(stab)) and its virulent (LPS(vir)) and avirulent (LPS(air)) subcultures were studied. LPS(vir) and LPS(avir) were identical in the monosaccharide composition and contained as the main components L-rhamnose (L-Rha) and 3-acetamido-3,6-dideoxy-D-galactose (D-Fuc3NAc), like LPS(stab) studied earlier. The NMR spectra of LPS(vir) were identical to the spectra of LPS(stab), whose O-chain repeating unit structure was studied by us earlier, whereas LPS(avir) differed from LPS(vir) in the NMR spectrum and was identified by us as the SR form. LPS(avir) was serologically identical to LP(stab) and LPS(vir). Hence, the degree of polymerism of the LPS O-chain of P. syringae pv. maculicola IMV 381 is the main virulence factor in the infected model plants. Serological relationships were studied between P. syringae pv. maculicola IMV 381 and the strains of other pathovars with structurally similar LPS.  相似文献   

12.
We have constructed strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa with mutations in the algC gene, previously shown to encode the enzyme phosphomannomutase. The algC mutants of a serotype O5 strain (PAO1) and a serotype O3 strain (PAC1R) did not express lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O side chains or the A-band (common antigen) polysaccharide. The migration of LPS from the algC mutant strains in Tricine-sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels was similar to that of LPS from a PAO1 LPS-rough mutant, strain AK1012, and from a PAC1R LPS-rough mutant, PAC605, each previously shown to be deficient in the incorporation of glucose onto the LPS core (K. F. Jarrell and A. M. Kropinski, J. Virol. 40:411-420, 1981, and P. S. N. Rowe and P. M. Meadow, Eur. J. Biochem. 132:329-337, 1983). We show that, as expected, the algC mutant strains had no detectable phosphomannomutase activity and that neither algC strain had detectable phosphoglucomutase (PGM) activity. To confirm that the PGM activity was encoded by the algC gene, we transferred the cloned, intact P. aeruginosa algC gene to a pgm mutant of Escherichia coli and observed complementation of the pgm phenotype. Our finding that the algC gene product has PGM activity and that strains with mutations in this gene produce a truncated LPS core suggests that the synthesis of glucose 1-phosphate is necessary in the biosynthesis of the P. aeruginosa LPS core. The data presented here thus demonstrate that the algC gene is required for the synthesis of a complete LPS core in two strains with different LPS core and O side chain structures.  相似文献   

13.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the major lipid on the surface of Gram-negative bacteria, plays a key role in bacterial resistance to hydrophobic antibiotics and antimicrobial peptides. Using atomic force microscopy (AFM) we characterized supported bilayers composed of LPSs from two bacterial chemotypes with different sensitivities to such antibiotics and peptides. Rd LPS, from more sensitive "deep rough" mutants, contains only an inner saccharide core, whereas Ra LPS, from "rough" mutants, contains a longer polysaccharide region. A vesicle fusion technique was used to deposit LPS onto either freshly cleaved mica or polyethylenimine-coated mica substrates. The thickness of the supported bilayers measured with contact-mode AFM was 7 nm for Rd LPS and 9 nm for Ra LPS, consistent with previous x-ray diffraction measurements. In water the Ra LPS bilayer surface was more disordered than Rd LPS bilayers, likely due to the greater volume occupied by the longer Ra LPS polysaccharide region. Since deep rough mutants contain bacterial phospholipid (BPL) as well as LPS on their surfaces, we also investigated the organization of Rd LPS/BPL bilayers. Differential scanning calorimetry and x-ray diffraction indicated that incorporation of BPL reduced the phase transition temperature, enthalpy, and average bilayer thickness of Rd LPS. For Rd LPS/BPL mixtures, AFM showed irregularly shaped regions thinner than Rd LPS bilayers by 2 nm (the difference in thickness between Rd LPS and BPL bilayers), whose area increased with increasing BPL concentration. We argue that the increased permeability of deep rough mutants is due to structural modifications caused by BPL to the LPS membrane, in LPS hydrocarbon chain packing and in the formation of BPL-enriched microdomains.  相似文献   

14.
Composition of O-antigenic lipopolysaccharides from Enterobacter cloacae   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Analyses have been carried out on lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from 14 strains of Enterobacter cloacae representing different O serotypes. All of the products appeared to have a composition and architecture typical of enterobacterial LPS, but points of interest include the absence of phosphate residues from the core oligosaccharide, the presence of both L-glycero-D-mannoheptose and D-glycero-D-mannoheptose (ratio usually about 4:1), and the presence in lipid A of small amounts of fatty acids with odd numbers of carbon atoms (mainly C13) in addition to tetradecanoic acid and 3-hydroxytetradecanoic acid. Monosaccharides identified as components of polymeric fractions from the LPS were glucose, galactose, mannose, rhamnose, glucosamine, galactosamine, fucosamine, and galacturonic acid. Most polymeric fractions also probably contained an O-acetyl substituent. Closely similar chemotypes found for the polymeric fractions from the LPS of cross-reacting serotypes support the view that these fractions contain the O-antigenic determinants and represent the side chains of the LPS.  相似文献   

15.
Four murine monoclonal antibodies reactive with distinctive regions of the hexose core domain of Salmonella lipopolysaccharide (LPS) were generated and their epitope specificities were delineated. MAST 56 (IgG1) and MAST 50 (IgG3) antibodies elicited by immunizations with Salmonella typhimurium Rb1 and Rb2 mutants, reacted selectively in enzyme immunoassay with the LPS from rough mutants. In contrast, MATy 1 (IgM) and MATy 2 (IgG2b) antibodies raised by an attenuated Salmonella typhi 620 Ty strain were reactive with LPS from both smooth and rough Salmonellae. Immunoblotting analysis showed that MATy 1 distinguished only the bottom bands (naked LPS core) among the heterogeneous LPS populations, whereas MATy 2 gave a ladder pattern (reactive with both naked and O-chain-substituted LPS cores). Differential binding specificities of MATy 1 and MATy 2 antibodies to the naked and capped LPS cores were further analyzed utilizing S. typhimurium polysaccharide fractions with different O-chain:core ratios which were obtained after separation by Sephacryl S-200 chromatography. Steric effects on the antibody reactivity by the bulky O-polysaccharide chain were detected. The use of chemically defined native and synthetic saccharides as inhibitors, in combination with the conformation of the Salmonella core oligosaccharide, permitted the definition of antigenic determinants carried in the core domain recognized by each antibody: (i) the branches I and VIII are essential for MATy 1 recognition, (ii) the backbone III-IV-V for MATy 2, (iii) the backbone II-III-IV-V for MAST 56, and (iv) the backbone plus the branch III-IV-V-VIII for MAST 50. (formula; see text)  相似文献   

16.
By the isolation of three different Aeromonas hydrophila strain AH-3 (serotype O34) mutants with an altered lipopolysaccharide (LPS) migration in gels, three genomic regions encompassing LPS core biosynthesis genes were identified and characterized. When possible, mutants were constructed using each gene from the three regions, containing seven, four, and two genes (regions 1 to 3, respectively). The mutant LPS core structures were elucidated by using mass spectrometry, methylation analysis, and comparison with the full core structure of an O-antigen-lacking AH-3 mutant previously established by us. Combining the gene sequence and complementation test data with the structural data and phenotypic characterization of the mutant LPSs enabled a presumptive assignment of all LPS core biosynthesis gene functions in A. hydrophila AH-3. The three regions and the genes contained are in complete agreement with the recently sequenced genome of A. hydrophila ATCC 7966. The functions of the A. hydrophila genes waaC in region 3 and waaF in region 2 were completely established, allowing the genome annotations of the two heptosyl transferase products not previously assigned. Having the functions of all genes involved with the LPS core biosynthesis and most corresponding single-gene mutants now allows experimental work on the role of the LPS core in the virulence of A. hydrophila.  相似文献   

17.
FC3-10 is a Klebsiella spp. specific bacteriophage isolated on a rough mutant (strain KT707, chemotype Rd) of K. pneumoniae C3. The bacteriophage receptor for this phage was shown to be the low-molecular mass lipopolysaccharide (LPS) fraction (LPS-core oligosaccharides), specifically the heptose content of the LPS inner-core. This is the first phage isolated on Klebsiella, the receptor for which is the LPS-core. This phage was unable to plate on Salmonella typhimurium LPS mutants with chemotypes Rd2 or Re showing incomplete or no heptose content on their LPS-core, respectively. Spontaneous phage-resistant mutants from different Klebsiella strains were deep-rough LPS mutants or encapsulated revertants from unencapsulated mutant strains.  相似文献   

18.
The role of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in the susceptibility of Aeromonas hydrophila strains of serotype O:34 to non-immune human serum was investigated using isogenic mutants (serum-sensitive), previously obtained on the basis of phage resistance, and characterized for their surface components. The classical complement pathway was found to be principally involved in the serum-killing of these sensitive strains. LPS preparations from serum-resistant or serum-sensitive strains, or purified core oligosaccharides (low-molecular-mass LPS) inactivated both bactericidal and complement activity of whole serum, while the O-antigen molecules (high-molecular-mass LPS) did not. The results indicate that LPS core oligosaccharide composition contributes to complement resistance of A. hydrophila strains from serotype O:34 with moderate virulence.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract The sensitivity of Salmonella typhimurium as well as of Escherichia coli to the bacteriophage Ox2 was found to require, in addition to the OmpA protein, a certain type of rough LPS. Heptoseless mutants were resistant and unable to adsorb the phage. Mutants with less defective LPS chemotype were sensitive and could, except the second most defective chemotypes, adsorb Ox2. However, isolated LPS-free OmpA protein could bind the phage, and this binding could not be increased by adding LPS.  相似文献   

20.
The general transducing phage P22 attacks only smooth (S) Salmonella with O antigen 12, determined by the oligosaccharide repeating unit constituting the distal part of the somatic lipopolysaccharide (LPS) side chain; non-S mutants, whose LPS contain few or no O repeating units, appear to be resistant. Auxotrophic non-S mutants of Salmonella typhimurium LT2 were tested as transductional recipients. Some transductants (0.5 to 5% as many as from S recipients) were obtained from most semirough recipients, either of class D (presumed leaky rouA mutants) or of a class due to mutation near his (presumed leaky rouB mutants), and from recipients lacking uridine diphosphogalactose epimerase or phosphomannose isomerase. Transductants were not obtained from several rouA, rouB, "heptose-negative," and glucose-1-transferase mutants, nor from most semirough class C mutants, whose LPS side chains each bear a single O oligosaccharide unit. Most transductants evoked from non-S recipients by temperate (c(+)) phage P22 were nonlysogenic, and virulent P22.c2 phage was about as effective as P22.c(+) in transduction to non-S recipients; probably all P22 transducing particles neither lysogenize nor kill. The extended-host-range mutant P22h gave qualitatively similar results,but evoked 5- to 30-fold more transductants from some non-S recipients than did P22. Probably, the LPS of non-S mutants susceptible to transduction contains a few O-specific oligosaccharide units, conferring a slight ability to adsorb P22 and a greater ability to adsorb P22h.  相似文献   

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