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1.
A hemagglutination inhibition assay was used to estimate the presence of soybean lectin-binding polysaccharide in whole culture, culture supernatant, and isolated exopolysaccharide of Rhizobium japonicum USDA 138. The occurrence of 0.1 to 0.2 μg of lectin-binding polysaccharide could be detected within 2 h with a 0.5-ml total sample. Lectin-binding polysaccharide was detected in all preparations during both exponential and stationary growth phases. The formation of lectin-binding polysaccharide was not, whereas that of total exopolysaccharide was, markedly affected by culture conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Spontaneous mutants with altered capsule synthesis were isolated from a marked strain of the symbiont,Rhizobium japonicum. Differential centrifugation was used to enrich serially for mutants incapable of forming capsules. The desired mutants were detected by altered colony morphology and altered ability to bind host plant lectin. Three mutants failed to form detectable capsules at any growth phase when cultured in vitro or in association with the host (soybean,Glycine max (L.) Merr.) roots. These mutants were all capable of nodulating and attaching to soybean roots, indicating that the presence of a capsule physically surrounding the bacterium is not required for attachment or for infection and nodulation. Nodulation by several of the mutants was linearly proportional to the amount of acidic exopolysaccharide that they released into the culture medium during the exponential growth phase, indicating that such polysaccharide synthesis is important and perhaps required for nodulation. Two of the mutants appeared to synthesize normal lectin-binding capsules when cultured in association with host roots, but not when cultured in vitro. Nodulation by these mutants appeared to depend on how rapidly after inoculation they synthesized capsular polysaccharide.Abbreviations CPS capsular polysaccharide - EPS exopolysaccharide - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate Contribution No. 719 of the C.F. Kettering Research Laboratory  相似文献   

3.
A procedure was developed to assess the ability of wild-type and mutant strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum to bind soybean lectin. The lectin-binding ability of bacteria grown on nitrocellulose filters was determined using peroxidase-labeled soybean lectin. The assay produced clear differences between strains known to be unable to bind soybean lectin and those which can. The assay gave results identical to those of the fluorescein isothiocyanate-soybean lectin-binding assay of T. V. Bhuvaneswari, S. G. Pueppke, and W. D. Bauer (1977, Plant Physiol. 60, 486-491) with regard both to the ability of particular B. japonicum strains to bind lectin and to the inhibition caused by N-acetyl-D-galactosamine. The method was used to screen Tn5-induced mutants of B. japonicum 2143 for their inability to bind soybean lectin. The procedure provides a sensitive and convenient method to screen Bradyrhizobium strains for the ability to bind soybean lectin.  相似文献   

4.
Highly purified soybean lectin (SBL) was labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC-SBL) or tritium ((3)H-SBL) and repurified by affinity chromatography. FITC-SBL was found to bind to living cells of 15 of the 22 Rhizobium japonicum strains tested. The lectin did not bind to cells of the other seven R. japonicum strains, or to cells of any of the nine Rhizobium strains tested which do not nodulate soybean. The binding of the lectin to the SBL-positive strains of R. japonicum was shown to be specific and reversible by hapten inhibition with d-galactose or N-acetyl-d-galactosamine.The lectin-binding properties of the SBL-positive R. japonicum strains were found to change substantially with culture age. The percentage of cells in a population exhibiting fluorescence after exposure to FITC-SBL varied between 0 and 70%. The average number of SBL molecules bound per cell varied between 0 and 2 x 10(6). While most strains had their highest percentage of SBL-positive cells and maximum number of SBL-binding sites per cell in the early and midlog phases of growth, one strain had a distinctly different pattern. The SBL-negative strains did not bind lectin at any stage of growth.Quantitative binding studies with (3)H-SBL indicated that the affinity constant for binding of SBL to its receptor sites on R. japonicum is approximately 4 x 10(7)m(-1). Many of the binding curves were biphasic. An inhibitor of SBL binding was found to be present in R. japonicum culture filtrates.  相似文献   

5.
In Rhizobium japonicum strain Nitragin 61A76, morphologically distinct types of bacteria were found to occur in yeast extract-mannitol broth cultures, at both mid-log and stationary phases. Of these only the capsular form, characterized by a smooth cell envelope, storage granules (glycogen and poly-beta-hydroxybutyric acid), and an amorphous extracellular capsule, bound soybean lectin. The binding site was localized in the capsular material. Less than 1% of the bacterial population differentiated into these capsular forms, which were also able to attach to the soybean root hair surface.  相似文献   

6.
A novel extracellular low-molecular-weight polysaccharide was detected as a contaminant within extracellular cyclic beta-1,6-beta-1,3-glucan preparations from Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110 cultures. Compositional analysis, methylation analysis, and nuclear magnetic resonance analysis revealed that this low-molecular-weight polysaccharide was composed of the same pentasaccharide repeating unit previously described for the high-molecular-weight form of the exopolysaccharide (EPS) synthesized by B. japonicum strains. Mass spectrometry analysis indicated that the size of this low-molecular-weight form of EPS was consistent with a dimeric form of the pentasaccharide repeating unit.  相似文献   

7.
A bacteriophage (phage TN1) that lyses Rhizobium japonicum 3I1b110 was isolated from Tennessee soil. Structurally, this phage resembles the Escherichia coli phage T4, having an icosahedral head (47 by 60 nm) and a contractile tail (17 by 80 nm). An interesting feature of this phage is that it lyses all of the symbiotic defective mutants derived from R. japonicum 3I1b110 that were tested, except one, mutant strain HS123. Mutant strain HS123 is a non-nodulating mutant that is defective in attachment to soybean roots. Since Rhizobium attachment to host roots is thought to be mediated by a specific cell surface interaction, it is likely that mutant strain HS123 is defective in some way in its cell surface. Mutant strain HS123 bound soybean lectin to the same extent as the wild type as measured by the binding of tritium-labeled lectin. Phage TN1 did not attach to the surface of strain HS123, nor did cells of strain HS123 inactivate phage TN1. A hot phenol-water cell extract from the wild-type inactivated phage TN1, whereas a similar cell extract from mutant HS123 did not. Capsular polysaccharide isolated from mutant or wild type did not inactivate the phage. Capsular polysaccharide and exopolysaccharide from the mutant and wild type do not differ in sugar composition. These results indicate that capsular polysaccharide may not play a role in attachment to the plant root surface and that other cell wall components may be important.  相似文献   

8.
Immunofluorescence, quantitative immunoprecipitation, and inhibition of bacterial agglutination and passive hemagglutination indicate that cross-reactive antigenic determinants are present on the surface of Rhizobium trifolii and clover roots. These determinants are immunochemically unique to this Rhizobium-legume cross-inoculation group. The multivalent lectin trifoliin and antibody to the clover root antigenic determinants bind competitively to two acidic heteropolysaccharides isolated from capsular material of R. Trifolii 0403. The major polysaccharide is an antigen which lacks heptose, 2-keto-3-deoxyoctulosonic acid, and endotoxic lipid A. The minor polysaccharide in the capsular material of R. Trifolii 0403 contains the same antigen in addition to heptose, 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate, and lipid A. The acidic polysaccharides of two strains of R. trifolii share the clover r-ot cross-reactive antigenic determinant despite other differences in their carbohydrate composition. Studies with monovalent antigen-binding fragments of anti-clover root antibody and Azotobacter vinelandii hybrid transformants carrying the unique antigenic determinant suggest that these polysaccharides bind R. trifolii to the clover root hair tips which contain trifoliin.  相似文献   

9.
A bacteriophage (phage TN1) that lyses Rhizobium japonicum 3I1b110 was isolated from Tennessee soil. Structurally, this phage resembles the Escherichia coli phage T4, having an icosahedral head (47 by 60 nm) and a contractile tail (17 by 80 nm). An interesting feature of this phage is that it lyses all of the symbiotic defective mutants derived from R. japonicum 3I1b110 that were tested, except one, mutant strain HS123. Mutant strain HS123 is a non-nodulating mutant that is defective in attachment to soybean roots. Since Rhizobium attachment to host roots is thought to be mediated by a specific cell surface interaction, it is likely that mutant strain HS123 is defective in some way in its cell surface. Mutant strain HS123 bound soybean lectin to the same extent as the wild type as measured by the binding of tritium-labeled lectin. Phage TN1 did not attach to the surface of strain HS123, nor did cells of strain HS123 inactivate phage TN1. A hot phenol-water cell extract from the wild-type inactivated phage TN1, whereas a similar cell extract from mutant HS123 did not. Capsular polysaccharide isolated from mutant or wild type did not inactivate the phage. Capsular polysaccharide and exopolysaccharide from the mutant and wild type do not differ in sugar composition. These results indicate that capsular polysaccharide may not play a role in attachment to the plant root surface and that other cell wall components may be important.  相似文献   

10.
The sialic acid binding loctin carcinoscorpin agglutinates Escharichiacoli K12 andSalmonellaminnesots R595 cells. This interaction can be inhibited by the saccharides namely 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate and the disaccharide D-(N-acetylneuraminyl) (2→6)2-acetamide-2-deoxy-D-galactitol. N-acetylneuraminic acid is shown to be a poor inhibitor. The same behaviour is seen when purified lipopolysaccharides from these two Gram negative bacteria are used. Vibriocholerae, a Grum negative bectarium devoid of 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate and Staphylococcussureus a typical Gram positive bacterium failed to agglutinate in the presence of the lectin. The results suggest that the 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate residues might represent the physiological substrate for the sialic acid binding lectin from the horseshoa crab.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract To establish the crucial role of lipopolysaccharide in the initial recognition event of symbiotic peanut-Rhizobium system the ability of various surface polysaccharides isolated from Bradyrhizobium arachis to inhibit the precipitin reaction between peanut agglutinin and asialoganglioside: deoxycholate (1:1) micelles was estimated. It was compared with that of nonsymbiotic systems e.g. Bradyrhizobium japonicum, Bradyrhizobium ciceris and Escherichia coli . Peanut agglutinin was found to interact more strongly with the lipopolysaccharide of Bradyrhizobium arachis than the exopolysaccharide or capsular polysaccharide. The inhibitory capacity of lipopolysaccharides from homologous and heterologous Bradyrhizobium as measured in terms of the concentration necessary for 50 percent inhibition of precipitin reaction were 1428, 500, 410, and 277 times less than that of lactose for Bradyrhizobium arachis, B. japonicum, B. ciceris and Escherichia coli , respectively. These results support that host lectin peanut agglutinin can recognize homologous Bradyrhizobium lipopolysaccharide by virtue of its binding specificity of higher magnitude.  相似文献   

12.
The binding of purified, ferritin-labeled soybean seed lectin to the cell surfaces of Rhizobium japonicum 31 lb 138 has been examined by whole mount, thin section, and freeze-etch electron microscopy. The ferritin-labeled lectin binds in a biochemically specific manner to the capsular material of this bacterium. The lectin does not bind to the outer membranes of the cells or to flagella. Labeled lectin binds to sites throughout the capsular structure, although the density of labeling is somewhat greater on the outer surface of the capsule. Some cells appear to be partially encapsulated. Preservation of the capsular material proved difficult, and methods for retaining most of the capsular material were developed.  相似文献   

13.
Electron microscopy of ruthenium red-stained ultrathin section of strains of Shigella dysenteriae type 1 grown in the Casamino Acids-yeast extract broth medium showed the presence of an extracellular slime layer. The slime appeared as a dense sheath covering bacteria. The presence of slime promoted hemagglutinating activity of the bacteria. The slime polysaccharide (SPS) isolated from the cell-free culture supernatant or the bacterial surface was less than 162,000 daltons in size and immunochemically similar. The SPS showed cross-reaction with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) antigen in immunological tests; however, it also appeared to be different from LPS since it did not contain 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate, a core sugar of LPS. A different pattern of separation from LPS was also observed by silver staining of SDS-polyacrylamide gels. From these data it appeared that either LPS and SPS are contaminated with each other or that SPS is the polysaccharide portion of LPS.  相似文献   

14.
The root exudate ofArachis hypogea (groundnut) and its seed lectin peanut agglutinin were found to stimulate the synthesis of exopolysaccharide and capsular polysaccharide of the microsymbiont cowpeaRhizobium strain JLn (c). The synthesis of capsular polysaccharide was enhanced 1.5-fold and 2-fold in the presence of peanut agglutinin and root exudate, respectively. The synthesis of capsular polysaccharide was suppressed in the presence of different forms of combined nitrogen. Quantitative differences were also detected between the exopolysaccharide of cells grown in the presence and absence of root exudate. Electron microscopic examination of negatively stained lectin-treated JLn (c) cells showed an increased deposition of capsular polysaccharide surrounding the cells. Hurthermore,ex planta nitrogenase activity of JLn(c) cells in the presence of lectin was found to be enhanced by 63% in correlation with the increased synthesis of polysaccharides. Part of this work was presented at the colloquium session of the 4th Hederation of Asian and Oceanian Biochemists Congress, held at Singapore, in November 1986.  相似文献   

15.
Acidic exopolysaccharides and O-antigen containing lipopolysaccharides were isolated from Rhizobium japonicum, R. leguminosarum, R. lupini, R. meliloti, R. phaseoli, cowpea Rhizobium sp. and a non-nodulating soil bacterium. Lectins from seeds of soybean (Glycine max), garden pea (Pisum sativum), lentil (Lens culinaris), alfalfa (Medicago sativa), field bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), jackbean (Canavalia ensiformis) and from wheat germ were tested for their capacity to precipitate rhizobial exopolysaccharides and lipopolysaccharides in the Ouchterlony double diffusion test. Soybean lectin precipitated exclusively with the exopolysaccharide of R. japonicum, whereas the lectins from pea and lentil precipitated exopolysaccharides from all the fast growing strains of Rhizobium. Host range specific interactions between lipopolysaccharides and lectins were observed in the pea/lentil-R. leguminosarum and in the alfalfa-R. meliloti systems. Concanavalin A precipitated the exopolysaccharides of all fast growing strains of Rhizobium, the exopolysaccharide of the cowpea strain and several lipopolysaccharides of different Rhizobium species and thus did not show any correlation between polysaccharide binding and symbiotic specificity. Non-leguminous wheat germ agglutinin did not precipitate any of the rhizobial polysaccharides tested and the lipopolysaccharide of the soil bacterium did not precipitate with any of the lectins examined.Abbreviations Con A Concanavalin A - CPC cetylpyridinium chioride - EPS exopolysaccharide - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - KDO 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonic acid - LPS lipopolysaccharide - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - PS polysaccharide  相似文献   

16.
In a series of our earlier studies, the O3 antigen isolated from culture supernatant of Klebsiella pneumoniae strain Kasuya (O3:K1) (KO3) was shown to exhibit very strong adjuvant activity in mice. KO3 obtained was homogeneous in analyses by either gel filtration or ultracentrifugation. Its molecular weight determined by ultracentrifugal analysis was greater than 2 X 10(6). It contained 37.9% C, 6.20% H, 0.24% N, and less than 0.1% P. KO3 was degraded into the polysaccharide moiety and lipid moiety (about 20%) by hydrolysis with 1% acetic acid at 100 C for 1 hr. The molecular weight of the polysaccharide moiety obtained by the hydrolysis was 16,200 as determined by the Somogyi-Nelson method. Chemical analyses using methylation analysis and Smith degradation as the principal methods indicated that the polysaccharide moiety consisted of a mannan which has a pentasaccharide repeating unit of alpha-mannosyl-1,3-alpha-mannosyl-1,2-alpha-mannosyl-1,2-alpha-mannosyl-1, 2-alpha-mannose joined through alpha-1,3-mannosyl linkages. The number of repetitions was less than 20. The fact that minor components such as 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate and glucose were detected suggests the presence of a core oligosaccharide, but its precise structure is unknown.  相似文献   

17.
The age-dependent lectin-binding ability of Rhizobium trifolii 0403 capsular polysaccharide (CPS) was examined by following the development of the capsule and its ability to interact with the white clover lectin trifoliin A. Bacteria grown on agar plates for 3, 5, 7, 14, and 21 days were examined by electron microscopy and immunofluorescence microscopy with antibodies prepared against either R. trifolii 0403 CPS or trifoliin A after pretreatment with the lectin. The capsule began to develop at one pole by day 3 and completely surrounded the cells in cultures incubated for 5 days or longer. The capsular polysaccharide on cells cultured for 3 and 5 days was completely reactive with trifoliin A, became noticeably less reactive by day 7, and was only reactive with the lectin at one pole of a few cells after that time. The quantity and location of lectin receptors on bacteria of different ages directly correlated with their attachment in short-term clover root hair-binding studies. Cells from 3- or 21-day-old cultures attached almost exclusively in a polar fashion, whereas cells grown for 5 days attached to root hairs randomly and in the highest numbers. CPS isolated from a 5-day-old culture had higher lectin-binding ability than CPS from 3- and 7-day-old cultures, whereas the CPS from a 14-day-old culture had the lowest. Chemical analyses of the isolated CPS showed changes in the levels of uronic acids (as glucuronic acid), pyruvate, and O-acetyl substitutions with culture age, but the neutral sugar composition remained relatively constant. These results provide evidence that the age-dependent distribution of lectin receptors dictates the level and orientation of attachments of R. trifolii 0403 to clover root hairs.  相似文献   

18.
Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110 synthesized both extracellular and periplasmic polysaccharides when grown on mannitol minimal medium. The extracellular polysaccharides were separated into a high-molecular-weight acidic capsular extracellular polysaccharide fraction (90% of total hexose) and three lower-molecular-weight glucan fractions by liquid chromatography. Periplasmic glucans, extracted from washed cells with 1% trichloroacetic acid, gave a similar pattern on liquid chromatography. Linkage analysis of the major periplasmic glucan fractions demonstrated mainly 6-linked glucose (63 to 68%), along with some 3,6- (8 to 18%), 3- (9 to 11%), and terminal (7 to 8%) linkages. The glucose residues were beta-linked as shown by H-nuclear magnetic resonance analysis. Glucan synthesis by B. japonicum cells grown on mannitol medium with 0 to 350 mM fructose as osmolyte was measured. Fructose at 150 mM or higher inhibited synthesis of periplasmic and extracellular 3- and 6-linked glucans but had no effect on the synthesis of capsular acidic extracellular polysaccharides.  相似文献   

19.
Soybean seed lectin stimulates adsorption of Bradyrhizobium japonicum to its host roots. Pretreatment of the rhizobia with soybean seed lectin for at least 6-12 h previous to their interaction with the plants was required to detect the stimulatory effect. This activity could be observed with as few as 1000 soybean seed lectin molecules per bacterium, and required specific carbohydrate binding. Infectivity and competitiveness for nodulation were also stimulated by preincubation of the rhizobia either with soybean seed meal extract or soybean seed lectin, the extract being more effective in enhancing competitiveness.  相似文献   

20.
A polysaccharide depolymerase isolated from the phage lysate of Rhizobium trifolii 4S was used to fragment capsular polysaccharides (CPS) and extracellular polysaccharides (EPS) of R. trifolii 0403 into oligosaccharides. These products were analyzed for clover lectin (trifoliin A)-binding ability, effect on infection of white clover root hairs, and changes in glycosyl and noncarbohydrate composition with culture age. The oligosaccharides from CPS of cultures grown on agar plates for 3, 5, and 7 days exhibited lectin-binding ability at levels similar to those of the corresponding intact CPS. The intact EPS did not bind to clover lectin, although the oligosaccharide fragments from EPS did. In contrast, oligosaccharides from deacetylated CPS had less than half the lectin-binding ability of the native polysaccharide substrate. The CPS from 5-day-old cultures, its corresponding oligosaccharide fragments, and the oligosaccharide fragments of EPS from 5-day-old cultures, all at a concentration of 2.5 micrograms per seedling, stimulated infection thread formation in root hairs of clover seedlings inoculated with R. trifolii 0403. Thus, this bacteriophage-induced polysaccharide depolymerase converted the acidic CPS and EPS of R. trifolii 0403 into biologically active oligosaccharides capable of binding trifoliin A and stimulating root hair infection. The amount of the noncarbohydrate substitutions (pyruvate, acetate, and ether-linked 3-hydroxybutyrate) in the CPS oligosaccharides changed with culture age as shown by 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The binding of trifoliin A, therefore, appears to be sensitive to changes in the degree of substitution of noncarbohydrate substitutions in the CPS of R. trifolii 0403.  相似文献   

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