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1.
Two natural variants of the actinomycin C-producing organism Actinomyces sp-26-115, i.e. H1 and H2 differ in their sensitivity to exogenic actinomycin, colony morphology, growth dynamics on the synthetic medium and stability to ultrasound and lysozyme. Both variants synthesize no actinomycin. Variant H1 is sensitive to exogenic actinomycin, while variant H2 is resistant to it. Variants H1 and H2 have some similarity in the composition of membrane proteins. Still, they differ in the protein molecular masses, which are equal to 600000--500000, 220000, 130000. The active variant A and nonactive variant H2 have the most similar compositions of membrane proteins. These variants are also close in their growth dynamics, colony morphology, sensitivity to ultrasound and lysozyme. The membranes of all the variants studied contain phosphatidyl ethanol amide as the main phospholipid component. Insignificant differences are observed only with respect to the minor components. The content of teichoic acids in the cell walls of variant H2 is very high, slightly changes during the developmental stage and insignificantly increases on addition of actinomycin to the medium. The cell wall of variant H1 contains less amounts of teichoic acids. During the developmental stage they are liberated from the wall at a higher rate than peptidoglycan. The sensitivity to actinomycin does not increase with an increase in the culture age. It is probable that teichoic acid of the cell wall is one of the factors providing resistance to actinomycin in variant H2. It may be considered as a barrier preventing transport of exogenic actinomycin into the cell.  相似文献   

2.
Autolysin-defective pneumococci continue to synthesize both peptidoglycan and teichoic acid polymers (Fischer and Tomasz, J. Bacteriol. 157:507-513, 1984). Most of these peptidoglycan polymers are released into the surrounding medium, and a smaller portion becomes attached to the preexisting cell wall. We report here studies on the degree of cross-linking, teichoic acid substitution, and chemical composition of these peptidoglycan polymers and compare them with normal cell walls. peptidoglycan chains released from the penicillin-treated pneumococci contained no attached teichoic acids. The released peptidoglycan was hydrolyzed by M1 muramidase; over 90% of this material adsorbed to vancomycin-Sepharose and behaved like disaccharide-peptide monomers during chromatography, indicating that the released peptidoglycan contained un-cross-linked stem peptides, most of which carried the carboxy-terminal D-alanyl-D-alanine. The N-terminal residue of the released peptidoglycan was alanine, with only a minor contribution from lysine. In addition to the usual stem peptide components of pneumococcal cell walls (alanine, lysine, and glutamic acid), chemical analysis revealed the presence of significant amounts of serine, aspartate, and glycine and a high amount of alanine and glutamate as well. We suggest that these latter amino acids and the excess alanine and glutamate are present as interpeptide bridges. Heterogeneity of these was suggested by the observation that digestion of the released peptidoglycan with the pneumococcal murein hydrolase (amidase) produced peptides that were resolved by ion-exchange chromatography into two distinct peaks; the more highly mobile of these was enriched with glycine and aspartate. The peptidoglycan chains that became attached to the preexisting cell wall in the presence of penicillin contained fewer peptide cross-links and proportionally fewer attached teichoic acids than did their normal counterparts. The normal cell wall was heavily cross-linked, and the cross-linked peptides were distributed equally between the teichoic acid-linked and teichoic acid-free fragments.  相似文献   

3.
Major sites of metal binding in Bacillus licheniformis walls.   总被引:6,自引:2,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Isolated and purified walls of Bacillus licheniformis NCTC 6346 his contained peptidoglycan, teichoic acid, and teichuronic acid (0.36 mumol of diaminopimelic acid, 0.85 mumol of organic phosphorus, and 0.43 mumol of glucuronic acid per mg [dry weight] of walls, respectively). The walls also contained a total of 0.208 mumol of metal per mg. When these walls were subjected to metal-binding conditions (T. J. Beveridge and R. G. E. Murray, J. Bacteriol. 127:1502-1518, 1976) for nine metals, the amount of bound metal above background ranged from 0.910 mumol of Na to 0.031 mumol of Au per mg of walls. Most were in the 0.500-mumol mg-1 range. Electron-scattering profiles from unstained thin sections indicated that the metal was dispersed throughout the wall fabric. Mild alkali treatment extracted teichoic acid from the walls (97% based on phosphorus) but left the peptidoglycan and teichuronic acid intact. This treatment reduced their capacity for all metals but Au. Thin sections revealed that the wall thickness had been reduced by one-third, but metal was still dispersed throughout the wall fabric. Trichloroacetic acid treatment of the teichoic acid-less walls removed 95% of the teichuronic acid (based on glucuronic acid) but left the peptidoglycan intact (based on sedimentable diaminopimelic acid). The thickness of these walls was not further reduced, but little binding capacity remained (usually less than 10% of the original binding). The staining of these walls with Au produced a 14.4-nm repeat frequency within the peptidoglycan fabric. Sedimentation velocity experiments with the extracted teichuronic acid in the presence of metal confirmed it to be a potent metal-complexing polymer. These results indicated that teichoic and teichuronic acids are the prime sites of metal binding in B. licheniformis walls.  相似文献   

4.
Cell walls were isolated from cells of Bacillus subtilis strain Marburg during synchronous outgrowth of spores, during the two synchronous cell divisions which followed, and at various times during exponential and early stationary growth. The amounts of teichoic acid and peptidoglycan components were determined in each cell wall preparation. The peptidoglycan is composed of hexosamine, alanine, diaminopimelic acid, and glutamic acid. The ratio of these was relatively constant in the cell walls at each stage of growth. The teichoic acid is composed of glycerol, phosphate, glucose, and ester-linked alanine. With the exception of glucose and ester-linked alanine, the ratios of these components were relatively constant throughout the growth cycle. There was a slight increase in the glucose content of the teichoic acid as the cells aged. There was no correlation between the amount of ester-linked alanine and the stage of growth. The ratio of teichoic acid (based upon phosphate content) to peptidoglycan (based upon diaminopimelic acid content) remained at nearly a constant level throughout the growth cycle. The conclusion is presented that these two cell wall polymers are coordinately synthesized during spore outgrowth and throughout the vegetative growth cycle.  相似文献   

5.
The peptidoglycan layer of Spirillum serpens cell walls was isolated from intact cells after treatment with sodium dodecylsulfate and digestion with Pronase. The isolated peptidoglycan contained glucosamine, muramic acid, alanine, glutamic acid, and meso-diaminopimelic acid in the approximate molar ratio of 1:1:2:1:1. Aspartic acid and glycine were the only other amino acids found in significant quantities. N-terminal amino acid analyses of the tetrapeptide amino acids in the peptidoglycan revealed that 54% of the diaminopimelic acid molecules are involved in cross-linkage between tetrapeptides. This amount of cross-linkage is greater than that found in the peptidoglycan of previously studied cell walls of gram-negative bacteria. The polysaccharide backbone was isolated, after myxobacter AL-1 enzyme digestion of the peptidoglycan, by fractionation with ECTEOLA-cellulose and Sephadex G-100. An average length of 99 hexosamines for the polysaccharide chains was found (ratio of total hexosamines to reducing end groups).  相似文献   

6.
I Kawamoto  T Oka    T Nara 《Journal of bacteriology》1981,146(2):527-534
Cell walls of 19 Micromonospora species were analyzed for their components. All the cell walls had xylose and arabinose, but the presence of glucose, galactose, mannose, or rhamnose depended on the strain. Amino acids present in the walls consisted of glycine, glutamic acid, diaminopimelic acid, and alanine, in a molar ratio of approximately 1:1:1:0.6--0.8. 3-Hydroxydiaminopimelic acid, together with meso-diaminopimelic acid, was found in many species and was isolated from Micromonospora olivoasterospora to compare the color constant in an amino acid analyzer with that of meso-diaminopimelic acid. The cell walls of Micromonospora sagamiensis and M. olivoasterospora contained only D-alanine and not L-alanine. All species tested except Micromonospora globosa contained glycolate in an almost equimolar ratio to diaminopimelic acid in their cell walls. Among 45 strains of 12 genera examined, Actinoplanes, Ampullariella, Amorphosporangium, and Dactylosporangium species had a significant amount of glycolate in the whole cells. Based on these results, the primary structure of the peptidoglycan of Micromonospora is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The composition of cell walls was comparatively studied in Streptomyces roseoflavus var. roseofungini 1128 and in its variant 1-68. In the logarithmic phase of growth, the content of teichoic acid in the cell wall of the parent culture was four times as high as in the cell wall of the variant. The cell walls of the parent culture contained 5 to 7 times more O-lysyl residues not only due to a higher content of teichoic acid in the walls but also owing to a lower content of lysyl groups in the teichoic acid of the variant. An additional polysaccharide comprising galactose and glucosamine was found in the cell wall of the variant but not in the parent strain. The peptidoglycan of the both cultures had a structure typical of Streptomyces spp.; its content in the cell walls of the two cultures was identical (ca. 50% of the dry cell wall biomass weight). The results are discussed in connection with the peculiarities of the variant hyphal septation.  相似文献   

8.
N Kojima  Y Araki    E Ito 《Journal of bacteriology》1985,161(1):299-306
The structure of the linkage regions between ribitol teichoic acids and peptidoglycan in the cell walls of Staphylococcus aureus H and 209P and Bacillus subtilis W23 and AHU 1390 was studied. Teichoic acid-linked saccharide preparations obtained from the cell walls by heating at pH 2.5 contained mannosamine and glycerol in small amounts. On mild alkali treatment, each teichoic acid-linked saccharide preparation was split into a disaccharide identified as N-acetylmannosaminyl beta(1----4)N-acetylglucosamine and the ribitol teichoic acid moiety that contained glycerol residues. The Smith degradation of reduced samples of the teichoic acid-linked saccharide preparations from S. aureus and B. subtilis gave fragments characterized as 1,2-ethylenediol phosphate-(glycerolphosphate)3-N-acetylmannosaminyl beta(1----4)N- -acetylxylosaminitol and 1,2-ethylenediolphosphate-(glycerol phosphate)2-N-acetylmannosaminyl beta(1----4)N-acetylxylosaminitol, respectively. The binding of the disaccharide unit to peptidoglycan was confirmed by the analysis of linkage-unit-bound glycopeptides obtained from NaIO4 oxidation of teichoic acid-glycopeptide complexes. Mild alkali treatment of the linkage-unit-bound glycopeptides yielded disaccharide-linked glycopeptides, which gave the disaccharide and phosphorylated glycopeptides on mild acid treatment. Thus, it is concluded that the ribitol teichoic acid chains in the cell walls of the strains of S. aureus and B. subtilis are linked to peptidoglycan through linkage units, (glycerol phosphate)3-N-acetylmannosaminyl beta(1----4)N-acetylglucosamine and (glycerol phosphate)2-N-acetylmannosaminyl beta(1----4)N-acetylglucosamine, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
The structure of the linkage unit between ribitol teichoic acid and peptidoglycan in the cell walls of Listeria monocytogenes EGD was studied. A teichoic-acid--glycopeptide preparation isolated from lysozyme digests of the cell walls of this strain contained mannosamine, glycerol, glucose and muramic acid 6-phosphate in an approximate molar ratio of 1:1:2:1, together with large amounts of glucosamine and other components of teichoic acid and glycopeptides. A teichoic-acid-linked sugar preparation, obtained by heating the cell walls at pH 2.5, also contained glucosamine, mannosamine, glycerol and glucose in an approximate molar ratio of 25:1:1:2. Part of the glucosamine residues were shown to be involved in the linkage unit. Thus, on mild alkaline hydrolysis, the teichoic-acid-linked sugar preparation gave a disaccharide characterized as N-acetylmannosaminyl(beta 1----4)-N-acetylglucosamine [ManNAc(beta 1----4)GlcNAc] in addition to the ribitol teichoic acid moiety, whereas the teichoic-acid - glycopeptide was separated into disaccharide-linked glycopeptide and the ribitol teichoic acid moiety by the same procedure. Furthermore, Smith degradation of the cell walls gave a characteristic fragment, EtO2-P-Glc(beta 1----3)Glc(beta 1----1/3)Gro-P-ManNAc(beta 1----4)GlcNAc (where EtO2 = 1,2-ethylenediol and Gro = glycerol). The results lead to the conclusion that in the cell walls of this organism, the ribitol teichoic acid chain is linked to peptidoglycan through a novel linkage unit, Glc(beta 1----3)Glc(beta 1----1/3)Gro-P-(3/4)ManNAc-(beta 1----4)GlcNAc.  相似文献   

10.
Stable L-phase variants isolated from Bacillus licheniformis and Bacillus subtilis, when grown in osmotically stabilized media, do not synthesize peptidoglycan but have been found to accumulate the nucleotide precursors of this polymer. The enzymes involved in the synthesis of these precursors and the later membrane-bound stages of peptidoglycan synthesis have been investigated, and the L-phase variants have been shown to contain lesions, which provide a rational explanation for the absence of peptidoglycan and for the nature of the precursor accumulated. The majority of the L-phase variants contained a single enzymic defect, but two strains were isolated with double lesions. Five out of seven strains examined accumulated uridine 5'-diphosphate (UDP)-MurAc-L-ala-D-glu and were unable to synthesize diaminopimelic acid as a consequence of a defect in aspartate-beta-semialdehyde dehydrogenase activity. Two strains were deficient in UDP-MurAc: L-alanine ligase and accumulated UDP-MurAc. One strain accumulated the complete nucleotide precursor UDP-MurAc-L-ala-D-glu-mA2pm-D-ala-D-ala and was deficient in phospho-N-acetylmuramyl pentapeptide translocase. A second strain also had this lesion, together with defective aspartate-beta-semialdehyde dehydrogenase activity. The other enzymes of peptidoglycan synthesis were present in the L-phase variants, with activities similar to those found in the parent bacilli grown under identical conditions. Membrane preparations from certain of the L-phase variants were also capable of synthesizing the secondary polymers poly(glycerol phosphate) teichoic acid and teichuronic acid and also a polymer of N-acetylglucosamine.  相似文献   

11.
S Kaya  K Yokoyama  Y Araki    E Ito 《Journal of bacteriology》1984,158(3):990-996
The structure of teichoic acid-glycopeptide complexes isolated from lysozyme digests of cell walls of Bacillus subtilis (four strains) and Bacillus licheniformis (one strain) was studied to obtain information on the structural relationship between glycerol teichoic acids and their linkage saccharides. Each preparation of the complexes contained equimolar amounts of muramic acid 6-phosphate and mannosamine in addition to glycopeptide components and glycerol teichoic acid components characteristic of the strain. Upon treatment with 47% hydrogen fluoride, these preparations gave, in common, a hexosamine-containing disaccharide, which was identified as N- acetylmannosaminyl (1----4) N-acetylglucosamine, along with large amounts of glycosylglycerols presumed to be the dephosphorylated repeating units of teichoic acid chains. The glycosylglycerol obtained from each bacterial strain was identified as follows: B. subtilis AHU 1392, glucosyl alpha (1----2)glycerol; B. subtilis AHU 1235, glucosyl beta(1----2) glycerol; B. subtilis AHU 1035 and AHU 1037, glucosyl alpha (1----6)galactosyl alpha (1----1 or 3)glycerol; B. licheniformis AHU 1371, galactosyl alpha (1----2)glycerol. By means of Smith degradation, the galactose residues in the teichoic acid-glycopeptide complexes from B. subtilis AHU 1035 and AHU 1037 and B. licheniformis AHU 1371 were shown to be involved in the backbone chains of the teichoic acid moieties. Thus, the glycerol teichoic acids in the cell walls of five bacterial strains seem to be joined to peptidoglycan through a common linkage disaccharide, N- acetylmannosaminyl (1----4)N-acetylglucosamine, irrespective of the structural diversity in the glycosidic branches and backbone chains.  相似文献   

12.
Cell walls were isolated by sonic disruption of log-phase cells of Clostridium botulinum type A strain 190L and purified by treatment with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) followed by digestion with proteases. Electron microscopy revealed that the cell walls thus obtained were free of both cytoplasmic membrane and cytoplasmic fragments. The purified cell wall contained 8.7% total nitrogen, 15.0% total hexosamines, 22.4% reducing groups, 8.3% carbohydrate, and 3.1% glucose. The content of total phosphorus was very low (0.02%), and therefore it was expected that teichoic acid might be absent in the cell wall. The wall peptidoglycan contained glutamic acid, alanine, diaminopimelic acid, glucosamine and muramic acid in the molar ratios of 1.00:1.85:0:85:1.06:0.67. A low amount of galactosamine was also present, but no other amino acids were found in significant quantities. The SDS-treated cell walls were not attacked by lysozyme, but after extraction with hot formamide they were completely dissolved by the enzyme and released reducing groups. The lysozyme digest was separated into two constituents, the saccharide moiety and the peptide moiety on Sephadex G-50.  相似文献   

13.
Chemical analysis of cell walls obtained from Hyphomicrobium B-522 and from a morphologically and nutritionally distinct organism, Hyphomicrobium neptunium (ATCC 15444), showed that the organisms have a similar cell wall composition, which is typical of gram-negative bacteria. The walls of both strains contained many amino acids, including the characteristic mucopeptide components diaminopimelic acid and muramic acid. Isolation of the mucopeptide by use of sodium dodecyl sulfate was successful only with cell walls of H. neptunium, thus revealing a difference between the walls of the two strains. The mucopeptide preparation contained glucosamine, muramic acid, alanine, glutamic acid, diaminopimelic acid, and glycine in molar ratios of 1.05:1.21:1.84:1.0:1.04:0.31, respectively. The concentration of glycine was sufficiently high to suggest that it is a mucopeptide component rather than an impurity.  相似文献   

14.
Madurose, an actinomycete whole-cell sugar, was found in the strains of the genus Streptomyces: three strains of S. platensis, one strain each of S. platensis subsp. malvinus, and S. albus subsp. albus. The sugar was isolated from the hydrolysate of S. platensis IFO 14008 cells, and was identified as madurose (3-O-methyl-D-galactose) by chromatographic analyses, 1H-NMR spectrometry, mass spectrometry as its alditol acetate, and demethylation with boron trichloride. Cell walls of the strain contained peptidoglycan and teichoic acids. ll-Diaminopimelic acid, glycine, glutamic acid, and alanine were present in the peptidoglycan fraction in molar ratios of 1.0:1.3:1.2:2.3. Madurose was detected in the teichoic acid fraction, which was composed of phosphorus, glycerol, galactose, and madurose in molar ratios of 9.3:8.5:2.9:1.0. Thus, madurose was found in the glycerol teichoic acid moiety of the cell walls of this strain.Abbreviations PC paper chromatography - TLC thin-layer chromatography - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - GLC gas-liquid chromatography - TCA trichloroacetic acid  相似文献   

15.
The morphology and cell wall composition of Bacillus coagulans, a facultative thermophile, were examined as a function of growth temperature. The morphology of the organism varied when it was grown at different temperatures; at 37 C the organism grew as individual cells which increased in length with increasing growth temperature. At 55 C it grew in long chains of cells. Cell wall prepared from cells grown at 37 C contained 44% teichoic acid by weight, whereas cells grown at 55 C contained 29% teichoic acid. Teichoic acid from these cells was a polymer of glycerol phosphate containing galactose and ester alanine. The ratio of ester alanine to phosphate was significantly higher in cell walls and teichoic acid from 37 C-grown cells compared with those from 55 C-grown cells. Other differences observed were that cells grown at 55 C contained a lower level of autolytic ability, produced cell walls which bound more Mg(2+), and contained less peptide cross-bridging in its peptidoglycan layer than cells grown at 37 C.  相似文献   

16.
Cell walls in 2 strains of Staphylococcus aureus 209P, i.e. actinomycin D susceptible and resistant ones were comparatively investigated. The resistant cells contained much more wall material per a unit of the biomass weight vs the susceptible strain cells, that conformed to thickening of the resistant cell walls detected by electron microscopy and a sharp increase of their electron density. Investigation of peptidoglycans and teichoic acids did not reveal any significant alterations in the structure of the wall components in the actinomycin D resistant cells. Only some increase of glucosamine in the peptidoglycan fraction of the resistant cells vs the susceptible ones was observed. It was shown that preparations of the resistant cell walls and peptidoglycan isolated from the resistant cells were able to bind somewhat lower quantities of actinomycin D vs the analogous preparations of the susceptible cells. The significant decrease of the antibiotic binding by live cells of the resistant strain probably slightly depended on the structure characteristics of the main wall components. The barrier properties of the walls in resistant staphylococci are most likely defined by the wall thickening and consolidation while adapting to actinomycin D.  相似文献   

17.
A study was made to determine whether factors other than the availability of phosphorus were involved in the regulation of synthesis of teichoic and teichuronic acids in Bacillus subtilis subsp. niger WM. First, the nature of the carbon source was varied while the dilution rate was maintained at about 0.3 h-1. Irrespective of whether the carbon source was glucose, glycerol, galactose, or malate, teichoic acid was the main anionic wall polymer whenever phosphorus was present in excess of the growth requirement, and teichuronic acid predominated in the walls of phosphate-limited cells. The effect of growth rate was studied by varying the dilution rate. However, only under phosphate limitation did the wall composition change with the growth rate: walls prepared from cells grown at dilution rates above 0.5 h-1 contained teichoic as well as teichuronic acid, despite the culture still being phosphate limited. The wall content of the cells did not vary with the nature of the growth limitation, but a correlation was observed between the growth rate and wall content. No indications were obtained that the composition of the peptidoglycan of B. subtilis subsp. niger WM was phenotypically variable.  相似文献   

18.
nov-12, a novobiocin-resistant mutant of Bacillus licheniformis ATCC 9945, grows as long chains of cells, a characteristic of autolytic-deficient (Lyt-) mutants. Isolated walls from nov-12 autolyzed at a rate equal to 5% of that displayed by wild-type walls, thus confirming the Lyt- phenotype. Protein-free nov-12 walls displayed marked resistance to, and also failure to bind, added autolysin solubilized from wild-type walls. Comparison of isolated cell walls revealed a deficiency in teichuronic acid in the mutant. Lesser differences were observed in walls of this strain, including a reduction in galactose, an increase in the proportion of peptidoglycan, and small quantitative differences in peptidoglycan composition though the proportions of protein and teichoic acid were similar in walls of both strains. Autolytic sensitivity was studied in walls in which protein, teichoic acid, and teichuronic acid were removed successively by selective extraction procedures. Autolysis of wild-type walls was unaffected by removal or protein or teichoic acid, but teichuronic acid removal rendered wild-type walls as insensitive to autolysis as mutant walls had been throughout. Therefore, in this mutant, deficiency in teichuronic acid alone leads to the Lyt- phenotype and, hence, activity and binding of autolysin(s) are dependent upon teichuronic acid but not teichoic acid. Also, the potential rate of autolysis of cell walls in this organism was correlated with the proportion of teichuronic acid in the wall. The possible significance of these findings with respect to control of autolysis and cell separation is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Structure of Bordetella pertussis peptidoglycan.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Bordetella pertussis Tohama phases I and III were grown to the late-exponential phase in liquid medium containing [3H]diaminopimelic acid and treated by a hot (96 degrees C) sodium dodecyl sulfate extraction procedure. Washed sodium dodecyl sulfate-insoluble residue from phases I and III consisted of complexes containing protein (ca. 40%) and peptidoglycan (60%). Subsequent treatment with proteinase K yielded purified peptidoglycan which contained N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylmuramic acid, alanine, glutamic acid, and diaminopimelic acid in molar ratios of 1:1:2:1:1 and less than 2% protein. Radiochemical analyses indicated that 3H added in diaminopimelic acid was present in peptidoglycan-protein complexes and purified peptidoglycan as diaminopimelic acid exclusively and that pertussis peptidoglycan was not O acetylated, consistent with it being degraded completely by hen egg white lysozyme. Muramidase-derived disaccharide peptide monomers and peptide-cross-linked dimers and higher oligomers were isolated by molecular-sieve chromatography; from the distribution of these peptidoglycan fragments, the extent of peptide cross-linking of both phase I and III peptidoglycan was calculated to be ca. 48%. Unambiguous determination of the structure of muramidase-derived peptidoglycan fragments by fast atom bombardment-mass spectrometry and tandem mass spectrometry indicated that the pertussis peptidoglycan monomer fraction was surprisingly homogeneous, consisting of greater than 95% N-acetylglucosaminyl-N-acetylmuramyl-alanyl-glutamyl-diaminopimelyl++ +-alanine.  相似文献   

20.
The cell wall peptodoglycans were isolated from Clostridium botulinum and some other species of the genus Clostridium by hot formamide extraction and their quantitative chemical composition and antigenic properties were determined. The petidoglycan of C. botulinum type E was found to be a diaminopimelic acid (DAP)-containing type composed of glucosamine, muramic acid, glutamic acid, alanine and DAP in the molar ratio of 0.76:0.78:1.00:1.88:0.81. All other types of C. botulinum and Clostridium sporogenes also belonged to the same peptidoglycan type. The peptidoglycans of Clostridium bifermentans and Clostridium histoloyticum contained DAP but they differed from those of C. botulinum in the molar ratio of alanine to glutamic acid. The peptidoglycan of Clostridium perfringens was composed of glutamic acid, alanine, DAP and glycine in the molar ratio of 1.00:1.64:0.94:0.90. On the other hand, the peptidoglycan of Clostridium septicum was found to contain lysine instead of DAP and the molar ratio was 1.00:1.41:0.96 for glutamic acid, alanine and lysine. In spite of the difference in amino acid composition of peptidoglycans among the clostridia, the quantitative precipitin test demonstrated that antiserum against C. botulinum type E peptidoglycan cross-reacted with the peptidoglycans from other clostridia as well as various types of C. botulinum.  相似文献   

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