Legionella pneumophila cell envelope: Permeability to hydrophobic molecules |
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Authors: | Richard D. Miller |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Louisville, School of Medicine, Health Sciences Center, 40292 Louisville, Kentucky, USA |
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Abstract: | Legionella pneumophila is sensitive to a number of toxic hydrophobic compounds. Suspensions of cells bound large amounts of the dye crystal violet, and disk agar diffusion assays confirmed the marked sensitivity to this compound. Fatty acids were also inhibitory to the growth ofL. pneumophila in liquid media, and growth inhibition increased with increasing chain length to a maximum with myristic acid. Oxygen uptake by respiring cells was inhibited by similar concentrations of fatty acids.L. pneumophila was also sensitive to low concentrations of progesterone. These results indicated thatL. pneumophila has an outer membrane with unusual permeability to hydrophobic compounds. This characteristic was accompanied by a measurable cell surface hydrophobicity as determined by adherence of the bacterium to the hydrocarbon hexadecane. |
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