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1.
Campylobacter jejuni is the predominant cause of antecedent infection in Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) or Miller Fisher syndrome (MFS). C. jejuni probably triggers GBS or MFS through molecular mimicry between bacterial sialylated lipo-oligosaccharides (LOS) and gangliosides in peripheral nerve tissue. We investigated whether co-infections with multiple C. jejuni strains occur in GBS or MFS patients and we further characterized these strains. PFGE analysis of 83 C. jejuni isolates from single primary colonies from stool cultures of 13 patients with GBS or MFS revealed co-infection with two different strains in one patient (8%). We showed that only strain GB5.1 contained an LOS biosynthesis gene locus that is associated with neuropathy. The patient serum strongly reacted with the LOS of strain GB5.1 and not with the LOS of strain GB5.2. Mass spectrometry revealed that both strains expressed a non-sialylated outer core structure in their LOS. The patient serum contained anti-asialo-GM2 antibodies that cross-reacted with the LOS of strain GB5.1. This study demonstrates that co-infection with multiple C. jejuni strains occurs in GBS patients. Consequently, not all C. jejuni strains isolated from the faeces of a GBS patient are involved in the pathogenesis of GBS per se. Furthermore, this is the first report in which cross-reactivity of antibodies to asialo-GM2 and to the LOS of a C. jejuni strain from a GBS patient has been demonstrated. This finding suggests that molecular mimicry with non-sialylated structures may also be involved in the pathogenesis of GBS.  相似文献   

2.
The lipooligosaccharides (LOS) of Campylobacter jejuni is an important virulence factor. Its core oligosaccharide component is frequently sialylated and bears a close resemblance with host gangliosides. The display of ganglioside mimics by this bacterium is believed to trigger the onset of the autoimmune condition Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in some individuals. Considerable effort has been directed toward the structural characterization of the glycan component of the LOS of C. jejuni strains isolated from GBS patients. Capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (CE-MS) has been a particularly useful analytical technique applied toward this task. Conventional analysis of bacterial LOS by CE-MS has generally involved the prior removal of O-acyl lipid chains, which is necessary for the effective solubilization and separation of the heterogeneous ensemble of LOS species. Unfortunately, O-deacylation causes the undesired removal of important glycan-associated O-linked modifications, such as O-acetate and O-linked amino acids. In this report, we describe a CE-MS technique developed for the rapid analysis of fully intact LOS from C. jejuni. Using this method, we report the structural characterization of the glycan from 10 GBS-associated strains and two enteritis strains, using material isolated from as little as one colony. The application of this technique has enabled us to unambiguously identify LOS-bound O-acetylated sialic acid in a number of strains and has revealed for the first time that C. jejuni frequently modifies its core with O-linked glycine. Our studies demonstrate that MS-based structural analysis of bacterial LOS can be optimized to the level where only a single-colony quantity of material is required and time-consuming chemical treatments can be avoided.  相似文献   

3.
Campylobacter jejuni is recognized as the most common identifiable pathogen associated with the development of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), an acute autoimmune-mediated disease affecting the peripheral nervous system. The immune response to ganglioside-like structures in lipo-oligosaccharides (LOSs) of certain C. jejuni strains is thought to cross-react with human nerve gangliosides and induce GBS. To study the involvement of LOSs in the pathogenesis of Campylobacter-induced GBS, we created truncated LOS molecules by inactivating the waaF gene in a GBS-associated isolate of C. jejuni. Gas Chromatography-MS analysis of the waaF mutant LOSs revealed a marked reduction in sugar content, including sialic acid and galactose. GM1 and GD1a-like mimicry was not detected in the waaF mutant by Western blot analysis with cholera toxin B and anti-GD1a antibodies. Mice immunized with the waaF mutant failed to develop anti-GM1 or anti-GD1a antibodies. The waaF mutant also showed reduced adherence to and invasion of INT-407 cells. The results indicate that the LOS of C. jejuni HB93-13 is essential for adherence and invasion as well as for anti-ganglioside antibody induction.  相似文献   

4.
Autoantibodies against gangliosides GM1 and GQ1b, characteristic cell surface glycolipids of the nervous system, are present in specific clinical types of GuillainBarré syndrome (GBS). Close associations of anti-GM1 with acute motor axonal neuropathy, and of anti-GQ1b with Miller Fisher syndrome, strongly suggest that these antibodies contribute to neuropathy pathogenesis. Immune responses against gangliosides are suspected to originate as a result of molecular mimicry between gangliosides and lipopolysaccharides of Campylobacter jejuni, the most frequent infectious trigger of GBS. Thus, antibodies against gangliosides may link C. jejuni infection with the precipitation of neurological disease.  相似文献   

5.

Background

Campylobacter jejuni is the predominant antecedent infection in Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS). Molecular mimicry and cross-reactive immune responses to C. jejuni lipo-oligosaccharides (LOS) precipitate the development of GBS, although this mechanism has not been established in patients from developing countries. We determined the carbohydrate mimicry between C. jejuni LOS and gangliosides, and the cross-reactive antibody response in patients with GBS in Bangladesh.

Methodology

Sera from 97 GBS patients, and 120 neurological and family controls were tested for antibody reactivity against LOS from C. jejuni isolates from GBS patients in Bangladesh (BD-07, BD-39, BD-10, BD-67 and BD-94) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Cross-reactivity to LOS was determined by ELISA. The LOS outer core structures of C. jejuni strains associated with GBS/MFS were determined by mass spectrometry.

Principle Findings

IgG antibodies to LOS from C. jejuni BD-07, BD-39, BD-10, and BD-67 IgG antibodies were found in serum from 56%, 58%, 14% and 15% of GBS patients respectively, as compared to very low frequency (<3%) in controls (p<0.001). Monoclonal antibodies specific for GM1 and GD1a reacted strongly with LOS from the C. jejuni strains (BD-07 and BD-39). Mass spectrometry analysis confirmed the presence of GM1 and GD1a carbohydrate mimics in the LOS from C. jejuni BD-07 and BD-39. Both BD-10 and BD-67 express the same LOS outer core, which appears to be a novel structure displaying GA2 and GD3 mimicry. Up to 90–100% of serum reactivity to gangliosides in two patients (DK-07 and DK-39) was inhibited by 50 µg/ml of LOS from the autologous C. jejuni isolates. However, patient DK-07 developed an anti-GD1a immune response while patient DK-39 developed an anti-GM1 immune response.

Conclusion

Carbohydrate mimicry between C. jejuni LOS and gangliosides, and cross-reactive serum antibody precipitate the majority of GBS cases in Bangladesh.  相似文献   

6.

Background  

Campylobacter jejuni is the predominant cause of antecedent infection in post-infectious neuropathies such as the Guillain-Barré (GBS) and Miller Fisher syndromes (MFS). GBS and MFS are probably induced by molecular mimicry between human gangliosides and bacterial lipo-oligosaccharides (LOS). This study describes a new C. jejuni-specific high-throughput AFLP (htAFLP) approach for detection and identification of DNA polymorphism, in general, and of putative GBS/MFS-markers, in particular.  相似文献   

7.
The enteropathogen Campylobacter jejuni has the ability to synthesize glycan structures that are similar to mammalian gangliosides within the core component of its lipooligosaccharide (LOS). Exposure to ganglioside mimics in some individuals results in the production of autoantibodies that deleteriously attack nerve surface gangliosides, precipitating the onset of Guillain-Barré and Fisher syndromes (GBS and FS). We have characterized the interaction of four monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), established by sensitization of mice with LOS isolated from GBS- and FS-associated C. jejuni strains, with chemoenzymatically synthesized gangliooligosaccharides. Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) measurements demonstrate that three of the mAbs interact specifically with derivatives corresponding to their targeted gangliosides, with dissociation constants ranging from 10 to 20 microM. Antibody binding to the gangliooligosaccharides was probed by saturation transfer difference (STD) NMR spectroscopy. STD signals, resulting from antibody/oligosaccharide interaction, were observed for each of the four mAbs. In two cases, differential saturation transfer rates to oligosaccharide resonances enabled detailed epitope mapping. The binding of GD1a-S-Phe with GB1 is characterized by close association of the immunoglobulin with sites that are distributed over several residues of the oligosaccharide. This contrasts sharply with the profile observed for the binding of both GD3-S-Phe and GT1a-S-Phe with FS1. The close antigenic contacts in these ganglioside derivatives are confined to the N-acetylmannosaminyl portion of the terminal N-acetylneuraminic acid (NeuAc) residue of the disialosyl moiety. Our characterization of FS1 provides insight, at an atomic level, into how a single antigenic determinant presented by the LOS of C. jejuni can give rise to antibodies with binding promiscuity to [alphaNeuAc-(2-8)-alphaNeuAc]-bound epitopes and demonstrates why sera from FS patients have antibodies that are often reactive with more than one disialylated ganglioside.  相似文献   

8.
Heterogeneity in the lipooligosaccharides (LOS) of pathogenic Haemophilus and Neisseria species is evident from the multiplicity of components observed with electrophoretic analyses. Knowledge of the precise structures that make up these diverse LOS molecules is clearly the key to reaching an understanding of pathogenic processes such as phase variation and molecular mimicry. Except for a few cases, little is known about the specific structural features of LOS that underlie phase variation and molecular mimicry, partly because of the inherent difficulties in the structural elucidation of these complex glycolipids. In the lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli, rough, or R-type, mutants have been isolated that have provided insight into the biosynthetic pathways and associated genetics that control LPS expression. Nonetheless, recent work has shown that these R-type LPS are more complex than originally thought, and significant heterogeneity is still observed, primarily in their phosphorylation states. In order to investigate the structures of LPS and LOS in a more rapid fashion, we have determined the precise molecular weights of LOS (and LPS) preparations from various Haemophilus, Neisseria, and Salmonella species by electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry. The LOS (or LPS) were first O-deacylated under mild hydrazine conditions to remove O-linked esters primarily from the lipid A portion. Under negative-ion conditions, the O-deacylated LOS yield abundant multiply deprotonated molecular ions, (M-nH)n-, where n refers to the number of protons removed and therefore determines the absolute charge state, n = z. Mass spectra from different LOS and LPS preparations have provided detailed information concerning the structural basis for LOS (and LPS) heterogeneity and corresponding saccharide compositions. The identification of sialic acid in the LOS of Haemophilus and Neisseria species and the variable phosphorylation of the core of S. typhimurium LPS have afforded insights into the biosynthetic pathways used by these organisms. Information of this type is important for understanding the underlying genetic and environmental factors controlling LOS and LPS expression.  相似文献   

9.
Endotoxin [Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)/Lipooligosaccharide (LOS)] is an important virulence determinant in gram negative bacteria. While the genetic basis of endotoxin production and its role in disease in the pathogenic Neisseria has been extensively studied, little research has focused on the genetic basis of LOS biosynthesis in commensal Neisseria. We determined the genomic sequences of a variety of commensal Neisseria strains, and compared these sequences, along with other genomic sequences available from various sequencing centers from commensal and pathogenic strains, to identify genes involved in LOS biosynthesis. This allowed us to make structural predictions as to differences in LOS seen between commensal and pathogenic strains. We determined that all neisserial strains possess a conserved set of genes needed to make a common 3-Deoxy-D-manno-octulosonic acid -heptose core structure. However, significant genomic differences in glycosyl transferase genes support the published literature indicating compositional differences in the terminal oligosaccharides. This was most pronounced in commensal strains that were distally related to the gonococcus and meningococcus. These strains possessed a homolog of heptosyltransferase III, suggesting that they differ from the pathogenic strains by the presence a third heptose. Furthermore, most commensal strains possess homologs of genes needed to synthesize lipopolysaccharide (LPS). N. cinerea, a commensal species that is highly related to the gonococcus has lost the ability to make sialyltransferase. Overall genomic comparisons of various neisserial strains indicate that significant recombination/genetic acquisition/loss has occurred within the genus, and this muddles proper speciation.  相似文献   

10.
In this study, we characterize the interaction between non-piliated (P) Neisseria gonorrhoeae and human epithelial cells. P mutants lacking the pilus subunit protein PilE attach at low levels to cells. Although the binding may not lead to heavy inflammatory responses, the interaction between P Neisseria and host cells most probably play a role in colonization and asymptomatic carriage of the pathogen. Here we show that the adherence of P N. gonorrhoeae is blocked by GDP-β-S [guanosine 5'- O -(thio)diphosphate], a non-hydrolyzable GTP analogue, and by C3 exotoxin, an inhibitor of the small G-protein Rho. G-protein activators such as cholera toxin, that activates Gs, and fluoroaluminate, a general G-protein activator, induced bacterial adherence. Furthermore, increase of the extracellular free [Ca2+] dramatically enhanced adherence of non-piliated Neisseria . The pharynx and the urogenital tract are natural entry sites of the pathogenic Neisseria species, and at both sites the epithelial cells can be exposed to wide variations in Ca2+ concentration. Taken together, these data show the importance of extracellular Ca2+ in the pathogenic Neisseria -host interaction, and reveal a novel function of cholera toxin, namely induction of bacterial adherence.  相似文献   

11.
Lipooligosaccharides of the gastrointestinal pathogen Campylobacter jejuni are regarded as a major virulence factor and are implicated in the production of cross-reactive antibodies against host gangliosides, which leads to the development of autoimmune neuropathies such as Guillain-Barré and Fisher Syndromes. C. jejuni strains are known to produce diverse LOS structures encoded by more than 19 types of LOS biosynthesis clusters. This study demonstrates that the final C. jejuni LOS structure cannot always be predicted from the genetic composition of the LOS biosynthesis cluster, as determined by novel lectin array analysis of the terminal LOS glycans. The differences were shown to be partially facilitated by the differential on/off status of three genes wlaN, cst and cj1144-45. The on/off status of these genes was also analysed in C. jejuni strains grown in vitro and in vivo, isolated directly from the host animal without passaging, using immunoseparation. Importantly, C. jejuni strains 331, 421 and 520 encoding cluster type C were shown to produce different LOS, mimicking asialo GM(1), asialo GM(2) and a heterogeneous mix of gangliosides and other glycoconjugates respectively. In addition, individual C. jejuni colonies were shown to consistently produce heterogeneous LOS structures, irrespective of the cluster type and the status of phase variable genes. Furthermore we describe C. jejuni strains (351 and 375) with LOS clusters that do not match any of the previously described LOS clusters, yet are able to produce LOS with asialo GM(2)-like mimicries. The LOS biosynthesis clusters of these strains are likely to contain genes that code for LOS biosynthesis machinery previously not identified, yet capable of synthesising LOS mimicking gangliosides.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract: Several gangliosides, especially GD3 (disialosyllactosyl ceramide) in the presence of another lipid (lecithin) were found to enhance the binding of serotonin to serotonin binding protein (SBP) severalfold. In our conditions, this enhancement was linear to a concentration of 2.7 × 10−6I GD3 and a three- to fivefold increase in binding capacity of SBP was obtained with 8.8 × 10−6 M. The addition of this ganglioside led to an increase of serotonin binding sites, but not to an increase in the affinity of SBP to serotonin. Optimal binding capacity was found with a ratio of lecithin to ganglioside of 6: 1 (w/w). No binding was found in the absence of either SBP or Fe2+ (binding of serotonin to SBP is dependent on Fe2+). Other glycosphingolipids (sulfatide, GD1a, GD1b, GM1) showed lesser effects at low concentration, whereas asialo-GM1, cytolipin H, galactocerebroside and GM3 had insignificant effects. Since earlier studies suggested a storage role for serotonin binding protein, the interaction of gangliosides with this protein may regulate the concentration of the biogenic amine in the synapse.  相似文献   

13.
N-acetyl neuraminic acid (NANA) is a common constituent of Campylobacter jejuni lipo-oligosaccharide (LOS). Such structures often mimic human gangliosides and are thought to be involved in the triggering of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and Miller-Fisher syndrome (MFS) following C. jejuni infection. Analysis of the C. jejuni NCTC 11168 genome sequence identified three putative NANA synthetase genes termed neuB1, neuB2 and neuB3. The NANA synthetase activity of all three C. jejuni neuB gene products was confirmed by complementation experiments in an Escherichia coli neuB-deficient strain. Isogenic mutants were created in all three neuB genes, and for one such mutant (neuB1) LOS was shown to have increased mobility. C. jejuni NCTC 11168 wild-type LOS bound cholera toxin, indicating the presence of NANA in a LOS structure mimicking the ganglioside GM1. This property was lost in the neuB1 mutant. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry analysis of LOS from wild-type and the neuB1 mutant strain demonstrated the lack of NANA in the latter. Expression of the neuB1 gene in E. coli confirmed that NeuB1 was capable of in vitro NANA biosynthesis through condensation of N-acetyl-D-mannosamine and phosphoenolpyruvate. Southern analysis demonstrated that the neuB1 gene was confined to strains of C. jejuni with LOS containing a single NANA residue. Mutagenesis of neuB2 and neuB3 did not affect LOS, but neuB3 mutants were aflagellate and non-motile. No phenotype was evident for neuB2 mutants in strain NCTC 11168, but for strain G1 the flagellin protein from the neuB2 mutant showed an apparent reduction in molecular size relative to the wild type. Thus, the neuB genes of C. jejuni appear to be involved in the biosynthesis of at least two distinct surface structures: LOS and flagella.  相似文献   

14.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Neisseria meningitidis both express the lacto-N-neotetraose (LNT) lipooligosaccharide (LOS) molecule that can be sialylated. Although gonococcal LNT LOS sialylation enhances binding of the alternative pathway complement inhibitor factor H and renders otherwise serum-sensitive bacteria resistant to complement-dependent killing, the role of LOS sialylation in meningococcal serum resistance is less clear. We show that only gonococcal, but not meningococcal, LNT LOS sialylation enhanced factor H binding. Replacing the porin (Por) B molecule of a meningococcal strain (LOS sialylated) that did not bind factor H with gonococcal Por1B augmented factor H binding. Capsule expression did not alter factor H binding to meningococci that express gonococcal Por. Conversely, replacing gonococcal Por1B with meningococcal PorB abrogated factor H binding despite LNT LOS sialylation. Gonococcal Por1B introduced in the background of an unsialylated meningococcus itself bound small amounts of factor H, suggesting a direct factor H-Por1B interaction. Factor H binding to unsialylated meningococci transfected with gonococcal Por1B was similar to the sialylated counterpart only in the presence of higher (20 microg/ml) concentrations of factor H and decreased in a dose-responsive manner by approximately 80% at 1.25 microg/ml. Factor H binding to the sialylated strain remained unchanged over this factor H concentration range however, suggesting that LOS sialylation facilitated optimal factor H-Por1B interactions. The functional counterpart of factor H binding showed that sialylated meningococcal mutants that possessed gonococcal Por1B were resistant to complement-mediated killing by normal human serum. Our data highlight the different mechanisms used by these two related species to evade complement.  相似文献   

15.
Campylobacter jejuni produces both lipooligosaccharide (LOS) and a higher-molecular-weight polysaccharide that is believed to form a capsule. The role of these surface polysaccharides in C. jejuni-mediated enteric disease is unclear; however, epitopes associated with the LOS are linked to the development of neurological complications. In Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium the waaF gene encodes a heptosyltransferase, which catalyzes the transfer of the second L-glycero-D-manno-heptose residue to the core oligosaccharide moiety of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and mutation of waaF results in a truncated core oligosaccharide. In this report we confirm experimentally that C. jejuni gene Cj1148 encodes the heptosyltransferase II enzyme, WaaF. The Campylobacter waaF gene complements an S. enterica serovar Typhimurium waaF mutation and restores the ability to produce full-sized lipopolysaccharide. To examine the role of WaaF in C. jejuni, waaF mutants were constructed in strains NCTC 11168 and NCTC 11828. Loss of heptosyltransferase activity resulted in the production of a truncated core oligosaccharide, failure to bind specific ligands, and loss of serum reactive GM(1), asialo-GM(1), and GM(2) ganglioside epitopes. The mutation of waaF did not affect the higher-molecular-weight polysaccharide supporting the production of a LOS-independent capsular polysaccharide by C. jejuni. The exact structural basis for the truncation of the core oligosaccharide was verified by comparative chemical analysis. The NCTC 11168 core oligosaccharide differs from that known for HS:2 strain CCUG 10936 in possessing an extra terminal disaccharide of galactose-beta(1,3) N-acetylgalactosamine. In comparison, the waaF mutant possessed a truncated molecule consistent with that observed with waaF mutants in other bacterial species.  相似文献   

16.
Low-Mr lipopolysaccharides (LPS) of Campylobacter jejuni reference strains for serotypes O:1, O:4, O:23, and O:36 were examined through the liberation of core oligosaccharides by mild acid cleavage of the ketosidic linkage of 3-deoxy-D-manno-2-octulosonic acid residues to the lipid A moiety. The liberated oligosaccharides were examined for chemical structure by compositional analysis and methylated linkage analysis in conjunction with fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry of permethylated oligosaccharide derivatives. The results showed (i) that the LPS contained short oligosaccharide chains of branched nonrepetitive structure, to many of which N-acetylneuraminic acid residues remained attached by 2----3 linkages to 4-linked D-galactose residues in the core structure; (ii) that serotypical differences, which are not readily defined through qualitatively similar compositions, are clearly reflected in variations in linkage types and sequences of sugar residues in the outer core attached to an inner region of invariable structure; but (iii) that the presence or absence of NeuAc residues does not appear to be a basis for serotypical differences. The results also showed that oligosaccharide chains from LPS of serotypes O:1 and O:4 are distinctly different and are distinct again from those of the cross-reacting serotypes O:23 and O:36, between whose core oligosaccharide chains no differences were found. It is concluded that the structurally variable low-Mr LPS from C. jejuni show greater similarities to the lipooligosaccharides from Neisseria spp. than to the highly conserved core regions of Salmonella species. Those strains (serotypes O:23 and O:36) which also furnish high-Mr LPS are unique among gram-negative bacteria in possessing both low-Mr molecules of the Neisseria lipooligosaccharide type and high-Mr LPS of the Salmonella smooth type.  相似文献   

17.
Campylobacter jejuni, a Gram-negative spiral bacterium, is the most common bacterial cause of acute human gastroenteritis and is increasingly recognized for its association with the serious post-infection neurological complications of the Miller-Fisher and Guillain-Barré syndromes. C. jejuni lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is thought to be involved in the pathogenesis of both uncomplicated infection and more serious sequelae, yet the LPS remains poorly characterized. Current studies on C. jejuni suggest that all strains produce lipooligosaccharide (LOS), with about one-third of strains also producing high-molecular-weight LPS (referred to as O-antigen). In this report, we demonstrate the presence of the high-molecular-weight LPS in all C. jejuni strains tested. Furthermore, we show that this LPS is biochemically and genetically unrelated to LOS and is similar to group II and group III capsular polysaccharides. All tested kpsM, kpsS and kpsC mutants of C. jejuni lost the ability to produce O-antigen. Moreover, this correlated with serotype changes. We demonstrate for the first time that the previously described O-antigen of C. jejuni is a capsular polysaccharide and a common component of the thermostable antigen used for serotyping of C. jejuni.  相似文献   

18.
Nearly two dozen microbial pathogens have surface polysaccharides or lipo-oligosaccharides that contain sialic acid (Sia), and several Sia-dependent virulence mechanisms are known to enhance bacterial survival or result in host tissue injury. Some pathogens are also known to O-acetylate their Sias, although the role of this modification in pathogenesis remains unclear. We report that neuD, a gene located within the Group B Streptococcus (GBS) Sia biosynthetic gene cluster, encodes a Sia O-acetyltransferase that is itself required for capsular polysaccharide (CPS) sialylation. Homology modeling and site-directed mutagenesis identified Lys-123 as a critical residue for Sia O-acetyltransferase activity. Moreover, a single nucleotide polymorphism in neuD can determine whether GBS displays a "high" or "low" Sia O-acetylation phenotype. Complementation analysis revealed that Escherichia coli K1 NeuD also functions as a Sia O-acetyltransferase in GBS. In fact, NeuD homologs are commonly found within Sia biosynthetic gene clusters. A bioinformatic approach identified 18 bacterial species with a Sia biosynthetic gene cluster that included neuD. Included in this list are the sialylated human pathogens Legionella pneumophila, Vibrio parahemeolyticus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Campylobacter jejuni, as well as an additional 12 bacterial species never before analyzed for Sia expression. Phylogenetic analysis shows that NeuD homologs of sialylated pathogens share a common evolutionary lineage distinct from the poly-Sia O-acetyltransferase of E. coli K1. These studies define a molecular genetic approach for the selective elimination of GBS Sia O-acetylation without concurrent loss of sialylation, a key to further studies addressing the role(s) of this modification in bacterial virulence.  相似文献   

19.
Vyas AA  Schnaar RL 《Biochimie》2001,83(7):677-682
Gangliosides, sialylated glycosphingolipids which are the predominant glycans on vertebrate nerve cell surfaces, are emerging as components of membrane rafts, where they can mediate important physiological functions. Myelin associated glycoprotein (MAG), a minor constituent of myelin, is a sialic acid binding lectin with two established physiological functions: it is involved in myelin-axon stability and cytoarchitecture, and controls nerve regeneration. MAG is found selectively on the myelin membranes directly apposed to the axon surface, where it has been proposed to mediate myelin-axon interactions. Although the nerve cell surface ligands for MAG remain to be established, evidence supports a functional role for sialylated glycoconjugates. Here we review recent studies that reflect on the role of gangliosides, sialylated glycosphingolipids, as functional MAG ligands. MAG binds to gangliosides with the terminal sequence 'NeuAc alpha 3Gal beta 3GalNAc' which is found on the major nerve gangliosides GD1a and GT1b. Gangliosides lacking that terminus (e.g., GM1 or GD1b), or having any biochemical modification of the terminal NeuAc residue fail to support MAG binding. Genetically engineered mice lacking the GalNAc transferase required for biosynthesis of the 'NeuAc alpha 3Gal beta 3GalNAc' terminus have grossly impaired myelination and progressive neurodegeneration. Notably the MAG level in these animals is dysregulated. Furthermore, removal of NeuAc residues from nerve cells reverses MAG-mediated inhibition of neuritogenesis, and neurons from mice lacking the 'NeuAc alpha 3 Gal beta 3GalNAc' terminus have an attenuated response to MAG. Cross-linking nerve cell surface gangliosides can mimic MAG-mediated inhibition of nerve regeneration. Taken together these observations implicate gangliosides as functional MAG ligands.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract Rabbit polyclonal antibodies against the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of the Rd1P mutant strain R7 of Salmonella minnesota were serologically characterized using R7 LPS, dephosphorylated LPS, deacylated LPS, deacylated, dephosphorylated and reduced LPS, and synthetic partial structures. The latter comprised partial structures of the core region of Rd1P LPS bound to the β 1 → 6-linked glucosamine disaccharide with two amide-linked 3-hydroxytetradecanoic acid residues or artificial glycoconjugates comprised of the synthetic oligosaccharides coupled to bovine serum albumin. Using a passive hemolysis and an enzyme immunoassay, absorption and inhibition experiments, the antibody specificities present could be determined. One group of antibodies required components of the core region and the phosphorylated glucosamine disaccharide of the lipid A moiety for binding. The majority of phosphate-independent antibodies was directed against the trisaccharide l -glycero-α- d -manno-heptopyranose(1 → 3)- l -glycero-α- d -manno-heptopyranose(1 → 5)3-deoxy- d -manno-octulosonic acid. Antibodies against the 1 → 3- and 1 → 7-linked heptose disaccharides and against a single heptose were also detected, however, with low titers. No antibodies were found which required the presence of fatty acids.  相似文献   

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