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1.
The activity of the cytoplasmic CMP-2-keto-3-deoxyoctulosonic acid synthetase (CMP-KDO synthetase), which is low in Escherichia coli rough strains such as E. coli K-12 and in uncapsulated strains such as E. coli O111, was significantly elevated in encapsulated E. coli O10:K5 and O18:K5. This enzyme activity was even higher in an E. coli clone expressing the K5 capsule. This and the following findings suggest a correlation between elevated CMP-KDO synthetase activity and the biosynthesis of the capsular K5 polysaccharide. (i) Expression of the K5 polysaccharide and elevated CMP-KDO synthetase activity were observed with bacteria grown at 37 degrees C but not with cells grown at 20 degrees C or below. (ii) The recovery kinetics of capsule expression of intact bacteria, in vitro K5 polysaccharide-synthesizing activity of bacteria, and CMP-KDO synthetase activity of bacteria after temperature upshift from 18 to 37 degrees C were the same. (iii) Chemicals which inhibit capsule (polysaccharide) expression also inhibited the elevation of CMP-KDO synthetase activity. The chromosomal location of the gene responsible for the elevation of this enzyme activity was narrowed down to the distal segment of the transport region of the K5 expression genes.  相似文献   

2.
In Escherichia coli K-12, RcsC and RcsB are thought to act as the sensor and effector components, respectively, of a two-component regulatory system which regulates expression of the slime polysaccharide colanic acid (V. Stout and S. Gottesman, J. Bacteriol. 172:659-669, 1990). Here, we report the cloning and DNA sequence of a 4.3-kb region containing rcsC and rcsB from E. coli O9:K30:H12. This strain does not produce colanic acid but does synthesize a K30 (group I) capsular polysaccharide. The rcsB gene from E. coli K30 (rcsBK30) is identical to the rcsB gene from E. coli K-12 (rcsBK-12). rcsCK30 has 16 nucleotide changes, resulting in six amino acid changes in the predicted protein. To examine the function of the rcs regulatory system in expression of the K30 capsular polysaccharide, chromosomal insertion mutations were constructed in E. coli O9:K30:H12 to independently inactivate rcsBK30 and the auxiliary positive regulator rcsAK30. Strains with these mutations maintained wild-type levels of K30 capsular polysaccharide expression and still produced a K30 capsule, indicating that the rcs system is not essential for expression of low levels of the group I capsular polysaccharide in lon+ E. coli K30. However, K30 synthesis is increased by introduction of a multicopy plasmid carrying rcsBK30. K30 polysaccharide expression is also markedly elevated in an rcsBK30-dependent fashion by a mutation in rcsCK30, suggesting that the rcs system is involved in high levels of synthesis. To determine whether the involvement of the rcs system in E. coli K30 expression is typical of group I (K antigen) capsules, multicopy rcsBK30 was introduced into 22 additional strains with structurally different group I capsules. All showed an increase in mucoid phenotype, and the polysaccharides produced in the presence and absence of multicopy rcsBK30 were examined. It is has been suggested that E. coli strains with group I capsules can be subdivided based on K antigen structure. For the first time, we show that strains with group I capsules can also be subdivided by the ability to produce colanic acid. Group IA contains capsular polysaccharides (including K30) with repeating-unit structures lacking amino sugars, and expression of group IA capsular polysaccharides is increased by multicopy rcsBK30. Group IB capsular polysaccharides all contain amino sugars. In group IB strains, multicopy rcsBK30 activates synthesis of colanic acid.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The gene cluster of the capsular K5 polysaccharide, a representative of group II capsular antigens of Escherichia coli, has been cloned previously, and three regions responsible for polymerization and surface expression have been defined (I.S. Roberts, R. Mountford, R. Hodge, K. B. Jann, and G. J. Boulnois, J. Bacteriol. 170:1305-1330, 1988). Region 1 has now been sequenced, and five open reading frames (kpsEDUCS) have been defined (C. Pazzani, C. Rosenow, G. J. Boulnois, D. Bronner, K. Jann, and I. S. Roberts, J. Bacteriol. 175:5978-5983, 1993). In this study, we characterized region 1 mutants by immunoelectron microscopy, membrane-associated polymerization activity, cytoplasmic CMP-2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate (KDO) synthetase activity, and chemical analysis of their K5 polysaccharides. Certain mutations within region 1 not only effected polysaccharide transport (lack of region 1 gene products) but also impaired the polymerization capacity of the respective membranes, reflected in reduced amounts of polysaccharide but not in its chain length. KDO and phosphatidic acid (phosphatidyl-KDO) substitution was found with extracellular and periplasmic polysaccharide and not with cytoplasmic polysaccharide. This and the fact that the K5 polysaccharide is formed in a kpsU mutant (defective in capsule-specific K-CMP-KDO synthetase) showed that CMP-KDO is engaged not in initiation of polymerization but in translocation of the polysaccharide.  相似文献   

5.
Capsules of Escherichia coli, expression and biological significance.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Escherichia coli may cause intestinal or extraintestinal infections. Generally, extraintestinal E. coli are encapsulated. The capsules are important virulence determinants, which enable the pathogenic bacteria to evade or counteract the unspecific host defense during the early (preimmune) phase of infection. They interfere with the action of complement and phagocytes. This effect is generally transient and overcome by capsule-specific antibodies in the immune phase of the host defense. In some cases, capsules are not or only poorly immunogenic, as a result of structural relationship or identity with host material. Strains with such capsules (e.g., K1 or K5) are very virulent. Bacterial capsules consist of acidic polysaccharides, which are made up from oligosaccharide repeating units. The capsules of E. coli are divided into two groups, which differ in chemistry, biochemistry, and genetic organization. All capsular polysaccharides are chromosomally determined: those of group I close to his and those of group II close to serA. The biosynthesis and surface expression have been extensively studied with representatives of group II capsular polysaccharides. It could be shown that their biosynthesis is directed from a gene block that determines the synthesis of the polysaccharide, its translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane, as well as its surface expression in a coordinate process. The chemical nature of group II capsular polysaccharides, as well as the mechanism(s) of their biosynthesis and expression, is presented.  相似文献   

6.
The eight-carbon acid sugar 3-deoxy-d-manno-2-octulosonate (KDO) is an essential component of Gram-negative bacterial cell walls and capsular polysaccharides. KDO is incorporated into these polymers as CMP-KDO, which is produced in an unusual activation step catalyzed by the enzyme CMP-KDO synthetase. CMP-KDO synthetase activity has traditionally been considered exclusive to Gram-negative bacteria. CMP-KDO synthetase inhibitors attract great interest owing to their potential as selective bactericides. The sugar KDO is also a component of the rhamnogalacturonan II pectin fraction of the primary cell walls of most higher plants and of the cell wall polysaccharides of some green algae. However, the metabolic pathway leading to its incorporation into the plant cell wall is unknown. This paper describes the isolation and characterization of a maize gene, which codes for a protein very similar in sequence and activity to prokaryotic CMP-KDO synthetases. Remarkably, the maize gene can complement a CMP-KDO synthetase (kdsB) Salmonella typhimurium mutant defective in cell wall synthesis. ZmCKS activity is novel in eukaryotes. The evolutionary origin of ZmCKS is discussed in relation to the high degree of conservation between the plant and bacterial genes and its atypical codon usage in maize.  相似文献   

7.
In Escherichia coli K-12, the rcsA and rcsB gene products are positive regulators in expression of the slime polysaccharide colanic acid. We have previously demonstrated the presence of rcsA sequences in E. coli K1 and K5, strains with group II capsular K antigens, and shown that introduction of multicopy rcsA into these strains results in the expression of colanic acid. We report here the presence of rcsB sequences in E. coli K1 and K5 and demonstrate that RcsB also plays a role in the biosynthesis of colanic acid in strains with group II K antigens. In E. coli K1 and K5 grown at 37 degrees C, multicopy rcsB and the resulting induction of colanic acid synthesis had no significant effect on synthesis of the group II K antigens. K-antigen-specific sugar transferase activities were not significantly different in the presence or absence of multicopy rcsB, and introduction of a cps mutation to eliminate colanic acid biosynthesis in a K1-derivative strain did not influence the activity of the polysialyltransferase enzyme responsible for synthesis of the K1 polymer. Furthermore, immunoelectron microscopy showed no detectable difference in the size or distribution of the group II K-antigen capsular layer in cells which produced colanic acid. Colanic acid expression therefore does not appear to significantly affect synthesis of the group II K-antigen capsule and, unlike for group I K antigens, expression of group II K antigens is not positively regulated by the rcs system.  相似文献   

8.
The de novo expression of Escherichia coli K1, K5, and K12 capsules was analyzed with immunoelectron microscopy in temperature upshift experiments, with upshift from 18 degrees C (capsule restrictive) to 37 degrees C (capsule permissive). Newly produced capsular polysaccharides appeared at the cell surface atop membrane adhesion sites (Bayer's junctions). After plasmolysis of the bacteria at an early expression stage, the capsular polysaccharides were labeled at discrete sites in the periplasm by the immunogold technique. After temperature upshift in the presence of carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) or chloramphenicol, the polysaccharides were labeled in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract In Escherichia coli with group II capsules, the synthesis of capsular polysaccharide and its cellular expression are encoded by the kps gene cluster, which is composed of three regions. The central region 2 encodes proteins involved in polysaccharide synthesis, and the flanking regions 1 and 3 direct the translocation of the finished polysaccharide across the cytoplasmic membrane and its surface expression. The kps genes of E. coli with the group II capsular K5 polysaccharide, have been cloned and sequenced. Region 1 contains the kps E, D, U, C and S genes. In this communication we describe the overexpression of the kps D and kps U genes as well as the isolation of the KpsU protein from the recombinant bacteria by chloroform treatment. The purified KpsU protein exhibited CMP-Kdo-synthetase activity. The N-terminal sequence and two internal peptide sequences of the isolated protein are in agreement with that previously predicted from the DNA sequence of the kps U gene. The kinetic data of the CMP-Kdo-synthetase participating in K5 capsule expression (K-CMP-Kdo-synthetase) differ from those described for the CMP-Kdo-synthetase, participating in lipopolysaccharide synthesis (L-CMP-Kdo-synthetase).  相似文献   

10.
11.
The capsular K5 polysaccharide, a representative of group II capsular antigens of Escherichia coli, has been cloned previously, and three gene regions responsible for polymerization and surface expression have been defined (I. S. Roberts, R. Mountford, R. Hodge, K. B. Jann, and G. J. Boulnois, J. Bacteriol. 170:1305-1310, 1988). In this report, we describe the immunoelectron microscopic analysis of recombinant bacteria expressing the K5 antigen and of mutants defective in either region 1 or region 3 gene functions, as well as the biochemical analysis of the K5 capsular polysaccharide. Whereas the K5 clone expressed the K5 polysaccharide as a well-developed capsule in about 25% of its population, no capsule was observed in whole mount preparations and ultrathin sections of the expression mutants. Immunogold labeling of sections from the region 3 mutant revealed the capsular K5 polysaccharide in the cytoplasm. With the region 1 mutant, the capsular polysaccharide appeared associated with the cell membrane, and, unlike the region 3 mutant polysaccharide, the capsular polysaccharide could be detected in the periplasm after plasmolysis of the bacteria. Polysaccharides were isolated from the homogenized mutants with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide. The polysaccharide from the region 1 mutant had the same size as that isolated from the capsule of the original K5 clone, and both polysaccharides were substituted with phosphatidic acid. The polysaccharide from the region 3 mutant was smaller and was not substituted with phosphatidic acid. These results prompt us to postulate that gene region 3 products are involved in the translocation of the capsular polysaccharide across the cytoplasmic membrane and that region 1 directs the transport of the lipid-substituted capsular polysaccharide through the periplasm and across the outer membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Escherichia coli Capsule Bacteriophages II. Morphology   总被引:14,自引:8,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
The Escherichia coli capsule bacteriophages (K phages) described herein are specific for certain capsular strains of E. coli, all of them test strains for different E. coli K antigens. The phages are not adsorbed to the acapsular mutants of their host organisms nor to similar strains with serologically and chemically different capsular polysaccharides. Thirteen E. coli (and one Klebsiella) K phages were visualized in the electron microscope. Most viruses are similar to P22 and thus belong to Bradley group C; however, one each of group A (long, contractile tail) and group B (long, noncontractile tail) was also found. All K phages were seen to carry spikes but no tail fibers were detected. These results suggest that the structures responsible for the recognition of the thick (about 400 nm or more) capsular polysaccharide gels are located in these spikes.  相似文献   

13.
Many Escherichia coli strains are covered in a layer of surface-associated polysaccharide called the capsule. Capsular polysaccharides represent a major surface antigen, the K antigen, and more than 80 distinct K serotypes result from structural diversity in these polymers. However, not all capsules consist of K antigen. Some are due to production of an extensive layer of a polymer structurally identical to a lipopolysaccharide O antigen, but distinguished from lipopolysaccharide by the absence of terminal lipid A-core. Recent research has provided insight into the manner in which capsules are organized on the Gram-negative cell surface, the pathways used for their assembly, and the regulatory processes used to control their expression. A limited repertoire of capsule expression systems are available, despite the fact that the producing bacteria occupy a variety of ecological niches and possess diverse physiologies. All of the known capsule assembly systems seen in Gram-negative bacteria are represented in E. coli, as are the majority of the regulatory strategies. Escherichia coli therefore provides a variety of working models on which studies in other bacteria are (or can be) based. In this review, we present an overview of the current molecular and biochemical models for capsule expression in E. coli. By taking into account the organization of capsule gene clusters, details of the assembly pathway, and regulatory features that dictate capsule expression, we provide a new classification system that separates the known capsules of E. coli into four distinct groups.  相似文献   

14.
The polymannan O-antigenic polysaccharides (O-PSs) of Escherichia coli O8 and O9a are synthesized via an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter-dependent pathway. The group 2 capsular polysaccharides of E. coli serve as prototypes for polysaccharide synthesis and export via this pathway. Here, we show that there are some fundamental differences between the ABC transporter-dependent pathway for O-PS biosynthesis and the capsular polysaccharide paradigm. In the capsule system, mutants lacking the ABC transporter are viable, and membranes isolated from these strains are no longer able to synthesize polymer using an endogenous acceptor. In contrast, E. coli strains carrying mutations in the membrane component (Wzm) and/or the nucleotide-binding component (Wzt) of the O8 and O9a polymannan transporters are nonviable under conditions permissive to O-PS biosynthesis and take on an aberrant elongated cell morphology. Whereas the ABC transporters for capsular polysaccharides with different structures are functionally interchangeable, the O8 and O9a exporters are specific for their cognate polymannan substrates. The E. coli O8 and O9a Wzt proteins contain a C-terminal domain not present in the corresponding nucleotide-binding protein (KpsT) from the capsule exporter. Whereas the Wzm components are functionally interchangeable, albeit with reduced efficiency, the Wzt components are not, indicating a specific role for Wzt in substrate specificity. Chimeric Wzt proteins were constructed in order to localize the region involved in substrate specificity to the C-terminal domain.  相似文献   

15.
16.
We are studying an O4/K54/H5 Escherichia coli bacteremic isolate (CP9) as a model pathogen for extraintestinal infection. Its group 2, K54 capsular polysaccharide is an important virulence determinant and confers serum resistance. In this study the effect of the group 1 capsule regulators, RcsA, RcsB, and Lon protease, on the regulation of CP9's capsular polysaccharides was assessed. It was established that in the presence of multicopy rcsA or with disruption of lon, CP9 can be induced to produce a group 1 capsule. RcsA, RcsB, and Lon are present in this K54 background and regulate group 1 capsule expression in a fashion similar to that described for K-12 strains. Two independent group 2 capsule gene protein fusions (cl1.29::TnphoA and cl1.137::TnphoA) were used to evaluate the effects of these regulators on group 2 K54 capsule production. Disruption of lon resulted in 1.9-fold (TR293 [cl1.29::TnphoA lon-146]) and 3.4-fold (TR1373 [cl1.137::TnphoA lon-146]) decreases in fusion activity at 28 degrees C, relative to the baseline level. However, decreases in fusion activity at 42 degrees C were only 1.2- and 1.4-fold, respectively. Inactivation of both lon and rcsA or lon and rcsB restored fusion activity to baseline levels at 28 degrees C, but only a partial restoration of activity was seen at higher temperatures. To assess whether these differences in fusion activity reflected a functional change in capsule production, the effects of 80% normal human serum (NHS) were tested against CP9 and TR93 (lon-146). Since the group 2 K54 capsule protects against the bactericidal activity of 80% NHS, a decrease in its production results in an increase in serum sensitivity. Viable counts of CP9 increased 10-fold in 80% NHS over 3 h at 28 degrees C, as expected. In contrast to CP9, TR93 (lon-146) incurred a 10-fold loss in viability under the same conditions. The levels of RcsA are increased in TR93 (lon 146) as consequence of lon disruption; therefore, these results in conjunction with the cl1::TnphoA protein fusion data establish RcsA as a negative regulator of the group 2 K54 capsular polysaccharide. Furthermore, these results also suggest existence of another Lon-sensitive negative regulator of group 2 K54 capsule production, which is active higher temperatures.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The kinetics of in vivo expression of the polysialosyl (K1) capsular antigen in Escherichia coli has been studied. Growth of E. coli K1 strains at 15 degrees C prevents K1 polysaccharide synthesis (F. A. Troy and M. A. McCloskey, J. Biol. Chem. 254:7377-7387, 1979). Synthesis is reactivated in cells grown at 15 degrees C after upshift to 37 degrees C. The early expression and resultant morphology of K1 capsular antigen was monitored in temperature upshift experiments by using electron microscopy. Morphological stabilization of the capsule was achieved by treatment of cells with an antiserum specific for the alpha, 2-8-linked polysialosyl antigen. The kinetics of K1 capsule expression in growing cells was measured by bacteriophage adsorption with phage K1F, which required the K1 capsule for binding. The results of temperature upshift experiments showed that capsule first appeared on the cell surface after 10 min. Subsequent bacteriophage binding increased linearly with time until a fully encapsulated state was reached 45 min after upshift. The initiation of K1 capsule appearance was dependent on protein synthesis and the addition of chloramphenicol before temperature upshift prevented any expression of the K1 antigen. Chloramphenicol reduced the rate of K1 synthesis when added after temperature upshift. We conclude from these results that protein synthesis is a prerequisite for activation of capsule expression in vivo, but not for subsequent elongation of polysialosyl chains.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Abstract The genes directing the expression of group II capsules in Escherichia coli are organized into three regions. The central region 2 is type specific and thought to determine the synthesis of the respective polysaccharide, whilst the flanking regions 1 and 3 are common to all group II gene clusters and direct the surface expression of the capsular polysaccharide. In this communication we analyze the involvement of region 1 and 3 genes in the synthesis of the capsular KS polysaccharide. Recombinant E. coli strains harboring all KS specific region 2 genes and having various combinations of region 1 and 3 gene were studied using immunoelectron microscopy. Membranes from these bacteria were incubated with UDP[14C]GlcA and UDPG1cNAc in the absence or presence of KS polysaccharide as an exogenous acceptor. It was found that recombinant strains with only gene region 2 did not produce the K5 polysaccharide. Membranes of such strains did not synthesize the polymer and did not elongate K5 polysaccharide added as an exogenous acceptor. An involvement of genes from region 1 (notably kps C and kps S) and from region 3 (notably kps T) in the K5 polysaccharide synthesis was apparent and is discussed.  相似文献   

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