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1.
Two natural variants, i.e. No. 1 and No. 2, not producing actinomycin were isolated from cultures of the actinomycin C-producing organism Actinomyces sp. 26-115. Variant No. 1 differed from the active variant by the growth dynamics and colony morphology. Variant No. 2 was close to the active variant by the growth dynamics. It was shown with electron microscopy that the cells of variant No. 1 differed from those of the active variant in the number and form of the mycelial septa, more even and compact structure of the cell walls and higher sensitivity to actinomycin. Still, they were more stable to the effect of lysozyme and ultrasound. The cell walls of the inactive variant No. 1 gradually lost teichoic acid during development, while the loss of peptidoglycan was observed only on transfer to the stationary phase. The cell walls of the active variant lost teichoic acid and peptidoglycan at the same time on transfer to the stationary phase. Peptidoglycans of both variants contained diaminopimelic acid (the configuration of which was not determined) and glycine (1:1) as differentiating amino acids. The two adjacent tetrapeptides were joined with one glycine radical. The peptidoglycan peptide chains of both variants contained muramic, glutamic and diaminopimelic acids and alanine (1:1:1:2). The peptidoglycans of the inactive variant No. 1 contained in addition valine and isoleucine. However, it is hardly probable that they are contained by the peptidoglycan peptide chains.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
1. Soluble mucopeptide was prepared by lysozyme treatment of acid-extracted walls of Bacillus licheniformis N.C.T.C. 6346 and separated into fractions differing in molecular size by chromatography on Sephadex G-25 and G-50. 2. About 16% of the weight of soluble mucopeptide has a weight-average molecular weight in excess of 20000. About one half has a weight-average molecular weight of less than 2000 and the balance of soluble mucopeptide is of intermediate size. 3. In the mucopeptide fractions isolated from Sephadex there is a correlation between the weight-average molecular weight, the number of non-reducing muramic acid residues and the proportion of diaminopimelic acid residues recovered after treatment with 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. 4. The extent of cross-linking between peptide side chains is relatively low, even in mucopeptide material of the large molecular size. 5. The small amount of residual phosphorus present in preparations of B. licheniformis soluble mucopeptide remains associated mainly with mucopeptide material of large molecular size. 6. The mucopeptide components of lowest molecular weight are not produced as artifacts during the preparation of soluble mucopeptide, but are apparently incorporated in the insoluble mucopeptide present in walls of exponentially growing cells. 7. Soluble mucopeptide isolated in a complex with acidic polymers after lysozyme treatment of walls of B. licheniformis N.C.T.C. 6346 and Bacillus subtilis W23 retains a high molecular weight when the covalent bonds between mucopeptide and the acidic polymers are broken. 8. Pure fragments were isolated from B. licheniformis soluble mucopeptide. A major component, C1, of the material of smallest size is made up of one residue each of N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylmuramic acid, l-alanine, glutamic acid and diaminopimelic acid. The N-acetylglucosamine is in beta-glycosidic linkage with a reducing N-acetylmuramic acid residue. The peptide unit is probably amidated. A quantitatively minor component, C2, has amino acid and amino sugar composition identical with that of component C1, but probably lacks an amide group. Another fragment, B1, is made up of two molecules of component C1 or C2 that are joined together through a molecule of d-alanine.  相似文献   

5.
Serological relationships among budding, prosthecate bacteria   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The somatic antigens of 25 strains of budding bacteria were typed and 14 serologically distinct groups were identified, suggesting considerable antigenic diversity among hyphomicrobia. Ten of the groups were represented by a single isolate, 2 contained two isolates, 1 three isolates, and 1 eight isolates. The strains in the largest group of eight isolates each shared at least one common antigen. However, there was also considerable antigenic heterogeneity within this cluster. Serological activity resided in the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) portion of cell walls and also in a heat labile component of Hyphomicrobium neptunium. The amino acid utilizing isolates, H. neptunium and Hyphomonas polymorpha, were serologically unrelated and it is suggested that the two organisms could be grouped as members of the same genus but not the same species.  相似文献   

6.
1. The polysaccharide and mucopeptide components of the cell wall of Lactobacillus fermenti, serological group F, were separated by mild conditions of acid hydrolysis; the polysaccharide was composed of glucose and galactose. 2. Soluble cell-wall products were isolated from cell wall lysed by lysozyme and a Streptomyces enzyme preparation. The lysozyme-dissolved fraction contained a greater proportion of mucopeptide. 3. The soluble preparations were heated in dilute acid to hydrolyse the linkage between the polysaccharide and mucopeptide components and then incubated with acid phosphatase. 4. Inorganic phosphate was released from products of Streptomyces enzyme action but not from products of lysozyme action. 5. The phosphate was shown to be present in the mucopeptide as muramic acid phosphate. It is concluded that in the intact wall polysaccharide is joined to muramic acid by a phosphodiester linkage.  相似文献   

7.
Actively growing strains of Vibrio fetus venerealis and V. fetus intestinalis, none of which produced penicillinase, were treated with inhibitory levels of penicillin or glycine, primarily to gain insight into the differential sensitivities of the two varieties to both of these compounds. Treatments induced the accumulation of uridine nucleotide glycopeptide precursors which contained amino sugars and amino acids in various molar ratios. Penicillin-induced nucleotides all contained muramic acid and sometimes glucosamine; they generally contained alanine, glutamic acid, diaminopimelic acid, and glycine. Approximately equimolar ratios of these components were observed in some compounds, but ratios varied considerably in others. Glycine-induced nucleotides contained muramic acid and, in some instances, glucosamine. Amino acids were detected only infrequently and usually in low molar ratios. The data suggest that penicillinase production, differences in the chemical composition of glycopeptide, and variations in modes of action of penicillin and glycine cannot individually account for the differential sensitivities of venereal and intestinal strains of V. fetus to these substances.  相似文献   

8.
1. Cell walls were isolated from Bacillus licheniformis N.C.T.C. 6346 and Bacillus subtilis Marburg strain 168 trp grown on casein hydrolysate into exponential phase. Autolysis was carried out and the soluble products, separated by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, from the two wall preparations are broadly similar in composition and are in agreement with autolysis proceeding with hydrolysis of amide bonds between l-alanine and N-acetylmuramic acid residues in the mucopeptide components. 2. Peptides originating from the mucopeptide components were isolated and shown to be a monomer peptide, l-alanyl-d-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelic acid and a dimer peptide containing two monomer peptides linked through a residue of d-alanine. Approximately one amide group is present for each equivalent tripeptide unit and is probably substituted on diaminopimelic acid residues. 3. Oligosaccharides originating from the mucopeptide components were isolated and after hydrolysis contained almost equimolar amounts of glucosamine and muramic acid and only very small amounts of amino acids. The number-average chain length, estimated by the release of non-reducing end groups of N-acetylglucosamine with exo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, is approximately ten hexosamine residues for oligosaccharides isolated from either organism. The oligosaccharides are polydisperse. 4. N-Acetylglucosamine residues are the only reducing terminals detectable in the oligosaccharides isolated from B. subtilis or B. licheniformis cell-wall autolysates. The number-average chain lengths of the oligosaccharides were determined by estimation of the content of these residues and are higher than those found by enzymic assay. Possible reasons for the discrepancy are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Components of the cell wall of Clostridium welchii (type A)   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
1. The cell wall of Clostridium welchii (type A) contains alanine, 2,6-diaminopimelic acid, glutamic acid, glycine, glucosamine, muramic acid, galactosamine, mannosamine, ethanolamine, rhamnose, galactose and phosphorus. 2. Heating with formamide at 150 degrees resolved the wall into a formamide-soluble polysaccharide fraction and a formamide-insoluble mucopeptide fraction. 3. The formamide-soluble fraction contained two components: an electrophoretically neutral polysaccharide made up of galactose, rhamnose, galactosamine and phosphorus and an electrophoretically acidic polymer containing mannosamine, ethanolamine and phosphorus. 4. The formamide-insoluble residue has been digested by lysozyme to give soluble fragments of high molecular weight. 5. All fractions contain an unknown ethyl acetate-extractable substance that can be oxidized by sodium metaperiodate. 6. The amino acid compositions of the fragments produced by lysozyme are compatible with a mucopeptide structure which has cross bridges containing all of the constituent amino acids.  相似文献   

10.
It has previously been established that several glycopeptides of peptidoglycan origin are formed as a result of processing of Bacillus subtilis cell walls by the macrophage-like cell line RAW264. Although the formation of these glycopeptides could account for the humoral immune responses characteristic of bacterial peptidoglycans, their formation does not account for the cellular-mediated immune responses observed for water-in-oil emulsions of peptidoglycan or for lipophilic derivatives of glycopeptide fragments thereof. Therefore, the processing of peptidoglycan by macrophages was reexamined to establish whether the lipophilic derivative of any peptidoglycan-derived glycopeptide was formed. The experiments were performed by incubating B. subtilis cell walls radiolabeled in muramic acid, glucosamine, alanine, glutamic acid, and diaminopimelic acid residues in the presence of the macrophage-like cell line RAW264. The crude lipid fraction derived from the macrophages was further fractionated and analyzed, revealing the presence of two lipophilic glycopeptides that contained glucosamine, muramic acid, and alanine of bacterial origin.  相似文献   

11.
Cell wall components were prepared from Actinopolyspora halophila (strain wt), an extremely halophilic actinomycete requiring a minimum 12% NaCl concentration for growth, and from an erythromycin-resistant strain of A. halophila (strain ER) that required only 6% NaCl for growth. Both cell wall preparations contained glutamic acid, alanine, and diaminopimelic acid in a 1:2:1 molar ratio. On the basis of muramic acid content, peptidoglycans from the wt and ER strains contained 255 and 245 disaccharide units per mg dry weight respectively. In addition, both cell wall preparations contained from 10 to 20% more glucosamine than muramic acid, and equimolar amounts of d-galactose and d-arabinose. Analysis of cell walls before and after digestion with Myxobacter AL-1 protease indicated that nearly all glycan disaccharide units were peptide-substituted and that peptide cross-bridging was facilitated by direct peptide linkages between N-diaminopimelic acid and C-terminal alanine. While the peptidoglycan of A. halophila wt was 50% peptide cross-linked, that from A. halophila ER was approximately 67% peptide cross-linked. Chemical modifications involving substitution of non-N-acetylated hexosamines of the cell walls greatly enhanced their sensitivity to lysozyme. Although differences in peptidoglycan structure between the two strains of A. halophila were observed, these probably do not account for the reduced salt requirement for growth of the erythromycin-resistant strain.Issued as NRCC 25165  相似文献   

12.
The genetic relatedness of a number of budding and prosthecate bacteria was determined by deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) homology experiments of the direct binding type. Strains of Hyphomicrobium sp. isolated from aquatic habitats were found to have relatedness values ranging from 9 to 70% with strain "EA-617," a subculture of the Hyphomicrobium isolated by Mevius from river water. Strains obtained from soil enrichments had lower values with EA-617, ranging from 3 to 5%. Very little or no homology was detected between the amino acid-utilizing strain Hyphomicrobium neptunium and other Hyphomicrobium strains, although significant homology was observed with the two Hyphomonas strains examined. No homology could be detected between prosthecate bacteria of the genera Rhodomicrobium, Prosthecomicrobium, Ancalomicrobium, or Caulobacter, and Hyphomicrobium strain EA-617 or H. neptunium LE-670. The grouping of Hyphomicrobium strains by their relatedness values agrees well with a grouping according to the base composition of their DNA species. It is concluded that bacteria possessing cellular extensions represent a widely diverse group of organisms.  相似文献   

13.
Chemical Composition of the Cell Walls of Bacillus stearothermophilus   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
Cell walls were isolated by mechanical disruption of mid-log phase cells of Bacillus stearothermophilus NCA 1503-4R grown in Trypticase-yeast extract-fructose medium at 55 C. The cell walls were purified by treatment with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and incubation with deoxyribonuclease and trypsin. The cell wall peptidoglycan contained glucosamine, muramic acid, alpha, epsilon-diaminopimelic acid, and glutamic acid. Low amounts of glycine, galactosamine, serine, aspartic acid, lysine, and valine were also present. The relative mole ratios of glutamic acid-alpha, epsilon-diaminopimelic acid-glycine-alanine were 1.00:1.26:0.08:1.55. The cell walls were free from ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid and contained less than 0.2% chloroform-methanol extractable lipid and 0.09 mumole of phosphorus per mg of cell wall. Teichoic acid was not detected in the cell walls of this organism. Cell walls isolated without treatment with SDS contained 7.5% chloroform-methanol extractable lipid, 0.24 mumole of phosphorus per mg of cell wall, and relatively high concentrations of all amino acids. These results suggest that the extracted lipid is not a cell wall component per se, but a contaminant from the lipoprotein cell membrane.  相似文献   

14.
1. The biosynthesis of teichoic acid in cell suspensions of two strains of Staphylococcus aureus is partially inhibited by the same low concentrations of penicillin that inhibit mucopeptide synthesis by 90–100%. Further increase in the concentration of the antibiotic by several hundred-fold still fails to cause any greater inhibition of teichoic acid synthesis. 2. Other conditions, such as amino acid deficiency or the presence of cycloserine or 5-fluorouracil, that inhibit mucopeptide synthesis also inhibit teichoic acid formation. 3. The degree of inhibition of teichoic acid synthesis caused by relatively high concentrations (10μg./ml.) of benzylpenicillin depends critically on the age of the culture from which the cell suspensions have been prepared. 4. No significant amounts of soluble teichoic acid have been found in the fluid from cells incubated in the presence of penicillin. 5. A high proportion of the teichoic acid formed in the presence of penicillin can be removed from wall preparations at room temperature by 0·1n-ammonia. This is not true of the teichoic acid formed in the absence of penicillin. 6. The teichoic acid extracted with ammonia from preparations of cell walls made from cells treated with penicillin is excluded from Sephadex G-25, has a low molar ratio of glucosamine to phosphorus and contains muramic acid, alanine, glutamic acid, glycine and lysine. 7. The implications of these results for the mechanism of action of penicillin are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The peptidoglycan of all four colonial types of a number of strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae constituted 1 to 2% of the dry weight of the cell. The chemical composition of cell types examined was similar with molar ratios of 1:1:2:1:1 for muramic acid, glucosamine, alanine, glutamic acid, and diaminopimelic acid, respectively. Ninety-six percent of the mass of the peptidoglycan was composed of these compounds. A lipoprotein analogous to that observed in Escherichia coli was not detected. The chain length of the glycan varied from 80 to 110 disaccharide units. The peptide contained equimolar amounts of D- and L-alanine. The rate of turnover of peptidoglycan in strain RD5 was 50% per generation. Turnover proceeded without a lag and followed first-order kinetics.  相似文献   

17.
Analytical procedures have been modified to determine the abundance of muramic acid in four different Holocene sediment samples. Muramic acid is specific to the peptidoglycan moiety of the cell walls of most eubacterial pro‐karyotic organisms. The following procedure seemed to be the most appropriate for the detection of muramic acid and amino acids, including diaminopimelic acid. Hydrolysis of the samples (in 6 N HCl, 4.5 h, at 100°C) was followed by separation and purification of amino sugars and amino acids using Amberlite XAD‐2 and then Bio‐Rad AG 50W‐X8 resins. The N,O‐heptafluorobutyryl‐n‐butyl ester derivatives were prepared by esterification in acidified (3 N HCl) n‐butanol for 3 h at 100°C, followed by acylation by refluxing with heptafluorobutyric anhydride in acetonitrile (2:1 v/v) for 12 min at 150°C. The derivatives were analyzed by gas chromatography (GC) and gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry. Fast atom bombardment (FAB) ionization was used for the muramic acid derivative to determine its molecular weight and structure, d‐and l‐amino acids were separated by GC and a capillary chiral column. By using this technique a stable N,O‐heptafluo‐robutyryl‐n‐butyl ester derivative of muramic acid was identified at picogram levels in Holocene sedimentary microbial communities. It has been reported previously that microorganisms in sediments rapidly degrade muramic acid from cell walls of dead prokaryotes. Kinetic experiments revealed that muramic acid was relatively stable in intact cell walls but decomposed rapidly in the free form. These investigations noted above showed that the concentration of muramic acid may be used as an indicator of the presence of the intact cell walls of cyanobacteria and most other bacteria in Holocene microbial communities, and of microbial contamination in samples older than the Holocene.  相似文献   

18.
The cell envelope of a marine pseudomonad as seen in thin section by electron microscopy has the double-membrane structure typical of other gram-negative bacteria. Cells washed with a solution containing Na(+), K(+), and Mg(++) at their concentrations in the growth medium, when suspended briefly in 0.5 m sucrose, lost 13% of their hexosamine in a form nonsedimentable by centrifugation at 73,000 x g. Since the resulting cells in thin section appeared unchanged, it was concluded that the material released was derived from a nonstaining, loosely bound outer layer. This same layer could be removed from the cells by washing with 0.5 m NaCl. A second nonsedimentable fraction was released after successive suspension of the cells in 0.5 m sucrose. Since this material was released only when the outer double-track structure had broken, it was concluded that it arose from a layer immediately underlying the latter layer. The three layers differed in their content of hexosamine and protein. None of the layers released contained muramic or diaminopimelic acid. The cell form remaining was rod shaped and appeared in thin section to be bounded only by its cytoplasmic membrane. This form contained all the muramic and diaminopimelic acid in the cell. Treatment with lysozyme released the muramic and diaminopimelic acid and converted the rod form to a protoplast, indicating that in the rod form (mureinoplast) a thin layer of peptidoglycan is located on the outside surface of the cytoplasmic membrane. Thus, five separate layers have been detected in the cell envelope of this marine pseudomonad.  相似文献   

19.
The location of the mucopeptide in the cell wall of Bacteroides convexus was determined by electron microscope after enzymatic and chemical treatment (papain, pepsin, lysozyme and phenol). In the five layered cell wall the innermost electron dense layer (or a part of it) proved to be the mucopeptide. The molar ratio of amino sugar and amino acid components of purified mucopeptide was about 1:1:1:1:1:1 for glucosamine, muramic acid, L-alanine, D-glutamic acid, DL(meso)-diaminopimelic acid and D-alanine.  相似文献   

20.
The cell wall constituents of Leuconostoc citrovorum 8082, L. mesenteroides 10830a, and L. mesenteroides 11449 have been ascertained. All three strains contained glycerol. Glucose and rhamnose were the major reducing sugar constituents. Alanine, glutamic acid, lysine, glucosamine, and muramic acid were the principal amino acids and amino sugars in all three strains. In addition, strain 10830a contained l-serine as a major cell wall component. Quantitative amino acid analyses indicate that glutamic acid, lysine, glucosamine, muramic acid, and serine may be present in the cell walls in equimolar amounts and that alanine is present in three to four times these quantities. The similarities and differences between the cell wall constituents of the leuconostocs and those of the lactobacilli and streptococci are discussed.  相似文献   

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