首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri (Xac) is the phytopathogen responsible for citrus canker, one of the most devastating citrus diseases in the world. A broad range of pathogens is recognized by plants through so-called pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), which are highly conserved fragments of pathogenic molecules. In plant pathogenic bacteria, lipopolisaccharyde (LPS) is considered a virulence factor and it is being recognized as a PAMP. The study of the participation of Xac LPS in citrus canker establishment could help to understand the molecular bases of this disease. In the present work we investigated the role of Xac LPS in bacterial virulence and in basal defense during the interaction with host and non host plants. We analyzed physiological features of Xac mutants in LPS biosynthesis genes (wzt and rfb303) and the effect of these mutations on the interaction with orange and tobacco plants. Xac mutants showed an increased sensitivity to external stresses and differences in bacterial motilities, in vivo and in vitro adhesion and biofilm formation. Changes in the expression levels of the LPS biosynthesis genes were observed in a medium that mimics the plant environment. Xacwzt exhibited reduced virulence in host plants compared to Xac wild-type and Xacrfb303. However, both mutant strains produced a lower increase in the expression levels of host plant defense-related genes respect to the parental strain. In addition, Xac LPS mutants were not able to generate HR during the incompatible interaction with tobacco plants. Our findings indicate that the structural modifications of Xac LPS impinge on other physiological attributes and lead to a reduction in bacterial virulence. On the other hand, Xac LPS has a role in the activation of basal defense in host and non host plants.  相似文献   

2.
When bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) enters the bloodstream, it is thought to have two general fates. If LPS binds to circulating leukocytes, it triggers innate host defense mechanisms and often elicits toxic reactions. If instead LPS binds to plasma lipoproteins, its bioactivity is largely neutralized. This study shows that lipoproteins can also take up LPS that has first bound to leukocytes. When monocytes were loaded with [(3)H]LPS and then incubated in plasma, they released over 70% of the cell-associated [(3)H]LPS into lipoproteins (predominantly high density lipoprotein), whereas in serum-free medium the [(3)H]LPS remained tightly associated with the cells. The transfer reaction could be reproduced in the presence of pure native lipoproteins or reconstituted high density lipoprotein. Plasma immunodepletion experiments and experiments using recombinant LPS transfer proteins revealed that soluble CD14 significantly enhances LPS release from the cells, high concentrations of LPS-binding protein have a modest effect, and phospholipid transfer protein is unable to facilitate LPS release. Essentially all of the LPS on the monocyte cell surface can be released. Lipoprotein-mediated LPS release was accompanied by a reduction in several cellular responses to the LPS, suggesting that the movement of LPS from leukocytes into lipoproteins may attenuate host responses to LPS in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Systemic release of endotoxin (LPS) after Gram-negative infection initiates a cascade of host cytokines that are thought to be the direct cause of shock, multisystem organ failure, and death. Endogenous LPS-binding proteins may play a role in regulating LPS toxicity in vivo. The human neutrophil granule protein bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein (BPI) shares sequence homology and immunocrossreactivity with an acute phase lipopolysaccharide binding protein (LBP) which has been shown to bind to LPS and accelerate LPS activation of neutrophils and macrophages. Although structurally similar, LBP and BPI are apparently functionally antagonistic. We previously showed that BPI inhibits LPS-mediated neutrophil activation in vitro. Here we demonstrate that BPI binds to LPS near the lipid A domain, and formation of the LPS-BPI complex abrogates detrimental host responses to LPS. For example, BPI blocks LPS-stimulated TNF release in vitro and in vivo, and LPS complexed to BPI is not pyrogenic in rabbits. Results demonstrating that BPI is released by stimulated human neutrophils further support the idea that BPI functions extracellularly in vivo to neutralize endotoxin. Taken together, these data argue that BPI neutralizes the toxic effects of LPS in vivo, and that BPI may represent a new therapeutic approach to the treatment of endotoxic shock.  相似文献   

4.

Background  

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a pathogen associated molecular pattern (PAMP) of animal and plant pathogenic bacteria. Variation at the interstrain level is common in LPS biosynthetic gene clusters of animal pathogenic bacteria. This variation has been proposed to play a role in evading the host immune system. Even though LPS is a modulator of plant defense responses, reports of interstrain variation in LPS gene clusters of plant pathogenic bacteria are rare.  相似文献   

5.
The significance of variability of biological properties of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) is discussed in the paper within the pathogenesis of infectious process. On the basis of an analysis of published data and of results of independent research of two microorganisms (Yersinia pestis and Francisella tularensis) a conclusion is made on that a biologically inert LPS form (with a weak cytokine-inducing ability, apirogenicity and non-toxicity etc.) is typical of highly pathogenic bacteria. It is suggested that the above phenomenon is biologically expedient. Presumably, the inert LPS transforms to the active form inside a sensitive host and, according to an infection stage, each of them being functionally significant. It is the inert status of LPS that enables the pathogens, at the initial stages, to surmount freely the humoral and cell barriers of host. As the infection progressively aggravates and the proliferation of bacteria modifies itself due to LPS micro- and macroorganisms, its chemical structure and biopolymer conformation change. Both modification mechanisms enhance the LPS toxic potential. In case of a sensitive host, such variations transform the biologically inert LPS into a toxically active form with its function of endotoxin being realized. There is no LPS modification in a host insensitive to such infection, which entails either recovery or prolonged persistence of the pathogen inside the microorganism.  相似文献   

6.
Zayas M  Villafane R 《Gene》2007,386(1-2):211-217
To understand the interaction between lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and proteins in molecular detail, a molecular genetic approach has been employed, using phage as a model system. The phage epsilon(34) is a Salmonella phage whose tailspike protein (TSP) uses the host LPS as its initial host cell receptor. Previous studies indicated that there was a similarity between the well-studied tail protein of Salmonella phage P22 and the epsilon(34). This study reports the identification of the gene for the epsilon(34) TSP as well as its initial characterization. In addition, some aspects of the structure of the epsilon(34) TSP have been deduced.  相似文献   

7.
Endotoxin, toll-like receptor 4, and the afferent limb of innate immunity   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Positional cloning work and subsequent biochemical analyses have revealed that Toll-like receptor 4 (Tlr4) transduces the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) signal, alerting the host to infection by Gram-negative bacteria. Moreover, it appears that the LPS sensing pathway is a solitary one: disruption of Tlr4 causes complete unresponsiveness to LPS. As several Tlr family members exist in vertebrates, it appears likely that the innate immune system defends the host by recognizing a small number of structurally conserved molecules that distinguish the microbial world from tissues of the host.  相似文献   

8.
Deacylation of purified lipopolysaccharides (LPS) markedly reduces its toxicity toward mammals. However, the biological significance of LPS deacylation during infection of the mammalian host is uncertain, particularly because the ability of acyloxyacyl hydrolase, the leukocyte enzyme that deacylates purified LPS, to attack LPS residing in the bacterial cell envelope has not been established. We recently showed that the cellular and extracellular components of a rabbit sterile inflammatory exudate are capable of extensive and selective removal of secondary acyl chains from purified LPS. We now report that LPS as a constituent of the bacterial envelope is also subject to deacylation in the same inflammatory setting. Using Escherichia coli LCD25, a strain that exclusively incorporates radiolabeled acetate into fatty acids, we quantitated LPS deacylation as the loss of radiolabeled secondary (laurate and myristate) and primary fatty acids (3-hydroxymyristate) from the LPS backbone. Isolated mononuclear cells and neutrophils removed 50% and 20-30%, respectively, of the secondary acyl chains of the LPS of ingested whole bacteria. When bacteria were killed extracellularly during incubation with ascitic fluid, no LPS deacylation occurred. In this setting, the addition of neutrophils had no effect, but addition of mononuclear cells resulted in removal of >40% of the secondary acyl chains by 20 h. Deacylation of LPS was always restricted to the secondary acyl chains. Thus, in an inflammatory exudate, primarily in mononuclear phagocytes, the LPS in whole bacteria undergoes substantial and selective acyloxyacyl hydrolase-like deacylation, both after phagocytosis of intact bacteria and after uptake of LPS shed from extracellularly killed bacteria. This study demonstrates for the first time that the destruction of Gram-negative bacteria by a mammalian host is not restricted to degradation of phospholipids, protein, and RNA, but also includes extensive deacylation of the envelope LPS.  相似文献   

9.
The lipopolysaccharides of the pathogenic Neisseria species are subject to structural variation owing to a combination of intrinsic changes in lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis and external modification of the LPS molecule with sialic acid. This variation appears to control bacterial behaviour by altering their ability to interact with human cells and to evade host Immune defences. This interconversion of LPS phenotypes, which is also observed during the natural infection, is probably due to environmental regulation of LPS biosynthesis superimposed on spontaneous changes in the DNA of distinct LPS loci. LPS variation may be a common strategy of mucosal pathogens to colonize and persist within the human host.  相似文献   

10.
Effective innate host defense requires early recognition of pathogens. Surfactant protein D (SP-D), shown to play a role in host defense, binds to the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) component of Gram-negative bacterial membranes. Binding takes place via the carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD) of SP-D. Recombinant trimeric neck+CRDs (NCRD) have proven valuable in biophysical studies of specific interactions. Although X-ray crystallography has provided atomic level information on NCRD binding to carbohydrates and other ligands, molecular level information about interactions between SP-D and biological ligands under physiologically relevant conditions is lacking. Infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS) provides molecular structure information from films at the air/water interface where protein adsorption to LPS monolayers serves as a model for protein-lipid interaction. In the current studies, we examine the adsorption of NCRDs to Rd 1 LPS monolayers using surface pressure measurements and IRRAS. Measurements of surface pressure, Amide I band intensities, and LPS acyl chain conformational ordering, along with the introduction of EDTA, permit discrimination of Ca (2+)-mediated binding from nonspecific protein adsorption. The findings support the concept of specific binding between the CRD and heptoses in the core region of LPS. In addition, a novel simulation method that accurately predicts the IR Amide I contour from X-ray coordinates of NCRD SP-D is applied and coupled to quantitative IRRAS equations providing information on protein orientation. Marked differences in orientation are found when the NCRD binds to LPS compared to nonspecific adsorption. The geometry suggests that all three CRDs are simultaneously bound to LPS under conditions that support the Ca (2+)-mediated interaction.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The structure of the phase-variable lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from the group B Neisseria meningitidis strain BZ157 galE was elucidated. The structural basis for the LPS's variation in reactivity with a monoclonal antibody (MAb) B5 that has specificity for the presence of phosphoethanolamine (PEtn) at the 3-position of the distal heptose residue (HepII) was established. The structure of the O-deacylated LPS was deduced by a combination of monosaccharide analyses, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. These analyses revealed the presence of a novel inner core oligosaccharide (OS) structure in the MAb B5 reactive (B5+) LPS that contained two PEtn residues simultaneously substituting the 3- and 6-positions of the HepII residue. The determination of this structure has identified a further degree of variability within the inner core OS of meningococcal LPS that could contribute to the interaction of meningococcal strains with their host.  相似文献   

13.
Innate recognition of lipopolysaccharide by Toll-like receptor 4-MD-2   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are pathogen recognition molecules that activate the immune system as part of the innate immune response. Microbial recognition by TLRs plays a crucial role in the host immune system's decision to respond or not to a particular microbial infection. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a membrane glycolipid of Gram-negative bacteria, exhibits strong immunostimulating activity among TLR ligands and has been studied in great detail. Recent studies have shown that cell surface TLR4-MD-2 physically interacts with LPS and triggers the release of an LPS signal, revealing a host-pathogen interaction mediated by TLR.  相似文献   

14.
The human embryonal kidney 293 cell (HEK‐293) is a widely used expression host for transient gene expression. The genes or plasmids used for the transient transfections are usually propagated and extracted from the gram‐negative bacterium Escherichia coli, the workhorse for molecular biologists. As a gram‐negative bacterium E. coli has an outer membrane (OM) containing lipopolysaccharides (LPS) or endotoxins. LPS are very potent inducers of inflammatory cytokines in the body. In early research phases DNA intended for transient transfections is not routinely checked for LPS‐levels. In this study we addressed the question whether LPS has an impact on the cultivation and production of a recombinant antibody. At high concentrations the presence of LPS has a detrimental impact on cell viability and recombinant protein expression. But low LPS concentrations are tolerated and might even enhance protein expression levels.  相似文献   

15.
Animals can sense the presence of microbes in their tissues and mobilize their own defenses by recognizing and responding to conserved microbial structures (often called microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs)). Successful host defenses may kill the invaders, yet the host animal may fail to restore homeostasis if the stimulatory microbial structures are not silenced. Although mice have many mechanisms for limiting their responses to lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a major Gram-negative bacterial MAMP, a highly conserved host lipase is required to extinguish LPS sensing in tissues and restore homeostasis. We review recent progress in understanding how this enzyme, acyloxyacyl hydrolase (AOAH), transforms LPS from stimulus to inhibitor, reduces tissue injury and death from infection, prevents prolonged post-infection immunosuppression, and keeps stimulatory LPS from entering the bloodstream. We also discuss how AOAH may increase sensitivity to pulmonary allergens. Better appreciation of how host enzymes modify LPS and other MAMPs may help prevent tissue injury and hasten recovery from infection.  相似文献   

16.
The bactericidal/permeability increasing (BPI) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-binding (LBP) proteins are closely related two-domain proteins in which LPS binding is mediated by the NH(2)-terminal domain. To further define the role of the COOH-terminal domain of these proteins in delivery of LPS to specific host acceptors, we have compared interactions of LBP, BPI, LBP(N)-BPI(C) (NH(2)-terminal domain of LBP, COOH-terminal domain of BPI), and BPI(N)-LBP(C) with purified (3)H-LPS and, subsequently, with purified leukocytes and soluble (s)CD14. The COOH-terminal domain of LBP promotes delivery of LPS to CD14 on both polymorphonuclear leukocytes and monocytes resulting in cell activation. In the presence of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+), LBP and BPI each promote aggregation of LPS to protein-LPS aggregates of increased size (apparent M(r) > 20 x 10(6) Da), but only LPS associated with LBP and BPI(N)-LBP(C) is disaggregated in the presence of CD14. BPI and LBP(N)-BPI(C) promote apparently CD14-independent LPS association to monocytes without cell activation. These findings demonstrate that the carboxyl-terminal domain of these closely related endotoxin-binding proteins dictates the route and host responses to complexes they form with endotoxin.  相似文献   

17.
BACKGROUND: Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) comprises the outer cell wall of all gram-negative bacteria. It consists of an oligosaccharide core and lipid A. All LPS-induced biological responses are lipid A-dependent. Once released, LPS triggers a host systemic inflammatory response that leads to septic shock. Binding studies have helped to reveal some of the molecular interactions behind septic shock. Such studies have employed methods of labeling bacterial LPS with either radiochemicals or fluorescent dyes. Poor labeling of the LPS has resulted in the use of high concentrations of LPS in order to detect its binding. METHODS: In this study, we have devised a new methodology for labeling LPS, using hydrazide and galactose oxidase in order to oxidize galactose residues to aldehyde groups in the oligosaccharide core of the LPS. RESULTS: We have managed to generate a conjugate that is highly fluorescent (LPS-to-Alexa 488 labeling ratio of 1:5) and biologically active. CONCLUSIONS: For the first time, this probe has enabled us to detect LPS binding even at pg/ml concentrations. Using this methodology, any Alexa-hydrazide dye can be conjugated to LPS, providing us with novel probes for imaging studies.  相似文献   

18.
The activation of leukocytes by bacterial cell wall lipopolysaccharide (LPS) contributes to the pathogenesis of septic shock. It is well established that, in the presence of plasma LPS-binding protein (LBP), LPS binds with high affinity to CD14. The binding of LPS to CD14 has been associated with the activation of cells, although available evidence indicates that CD14 itself does not transduce intracellular signalling. The physiological function of this interaction is to promote host defense mechanisms of cells to combat the infection and clear LPS from the circulation. At higher concentrations of LPS, however, the activation of cells can take place in the absence of LBP and CD14, presumably through a distinct low-affinity signalling LPS receptor. On the evidence published by us and others, we propose that in neutrophils, and possibly other leukocytes, L-selectin can act as a low-affinity LPS receptor.  相似文献   

19.
Brucella spp. are facultative intracellular pathogens that have the ability to survive and multiply in professional and non-professional phagocytes, and cause abortion in domestic animals and undulant fever in humans. Several species are recognized within the genus Brucella and this classification is mainly based on the difference in pathogenicity and in host preference. Brucella strains may occur as either smooth or rough, expressing smooth LPS (S-LPS) or rough LPS (R-LPS) as major surface antigen. This bacterium possesses an unconventional non-endotoxic lipopolysaccharide that confers resistance to anti-microbial attacks and modulates the host immune response. The strains that are pathogenic for humans (B. abortus, B. suis, B. melitensis) carry a smooth LPS involved in the virulence of these bacteria. The LPS O-chain protects the bacteria from cellular cationic peptides, oxygen metabolites and complement-mediated lysis and it is a key molecule for Brucella survival and replication in the host. Here, we review i) Brucella LPS structure; ii) Brucella genome, iii) genes involved in LPS biosynthesis; iv) the interaction between LPS and innate immunity.  相似文献   

20.
The lipopolysaccharides (LPS) of Gram-negative bacteria initiate potentially fatal processes in many host organisms. Recently published amino acid sequence data suggest that there is a family of LPS binding proteins that may participate in the host response to Gram-negative bacteremia. The first two members of the family to be identified are an LPS binding protein present in serum after an acute phase response in humans, mice, rabbits, and rats and a bactericidal/permeability increasing protein present in the primary granules of human and rabbit neutrophils. LPS binding protein and bactericidal/permeability increasing protein share an ability to bind to LPS, have homologous NH2-terminal amino acid sequences, and are immunologically cross-reactive. Nevertheless, these two molecules differ in their effects on LPS and Gram-negative bacteria, in their sites of biosynthesis, and localization in vivo.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号