Abstract: | The adhesion and internalization of Chlamydia trachomatis by HeLa cells was unaffected by removal of K+, Mg2+, or glucose from the incubation medium, slightly reduced by removal of Na+, and significantly reduced by omission of Ca2+, Sr2+, Mg2+, and Mn2+ could replace Ca2+ in the adhesion but only Sr2+ supported internalization, and La3+, Co2+, Fe3+, Ba2+, and Zn2+ all reduced internalization more than adhesion. During initial infection there was no measurable difference in the uptake or release of 45Ca2+ or 86Rb+ between infected and noninfected HeLa monolayers. Infection was not prevented by pretreatment of the monolayers with the calcium channel blockers, verapamil, D600, and nitrendipine, or the calmodulin inhibitors, TMB-8 or trifluperazine. The results suggest that divalent cations are not essential for chlamydial infection but that the process of internalization is facilitated by the presence of cations, particularly Na+ and Ca2+. |