Abstract: | Intact cells of several strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa agglutinate papain-treated human erythrocytes. The agglutinating activity appears to reside in the surface layers of the bacterium-Pseudomonas surface haemagglutinin. This activity does not correlate with the existence of the internal PA-I and PA-II lectins, the presence of fimbriae or adherence to human buccal epithelial cells. Disruption of the bacterial cells by sonication abolishes their haemagglutinating activity. The intact cells of P. aeruginosa are also able to agglutinate rabbit, chicken, dog, guinea pig and sheep erythrocytes. This activity is generally higher with papain-treated erythrocytes, except those of rabbit in which lower haemagglutinating activity is observed after papain treatment. Optimal conditions for the haemagglutination are 37 degrees C and pH 6-7. Simple sugars do not inhibit, while fetuin and hydrophobic amino acids inhibit this activity. Exposure of the bacterial cells to proteolytic enzymes, EDTA or denaturating conditions abolish the haemagglutinating activity. These results indicate that the surface haemagglutinin is a protein which agglutinates red blood cells via hydrophobic interactions. |