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Query: UMLS:C0026918 (
Mycobacterium
)
52,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neoglycoproteins bearing key glycosyl substituents of several glycopeptidolipid antigens of pathogenic
Mycobacterium
species have been synthesized. Allyl glycosides of the terminal 6-deoxyhexose-containing units of the antigens were prepared, with appropriate ether and ester substituents in place. Ozonolysis of the allyl glycosides was then followed by reductive coupling with epsilon-amino groups of
lysine
residues in bovine serum albumin, using sodium cyanoborohydride at pH 7.8. The resulting neoglycoproteins emulated the antigenicity of the native molecule in several serological tests.
...
PMID:Synthesis of allyl glycosides for conversion into neoglycoproteins bearing epitopes of mycobacterial glycolipid antigens. 172 32
For the purpose to establish the system to express foreign antigen from
Mycobacterium
bovis BCG. We have cloned, sequenced and expressed genes for secreting proteins, alpha antigen, MPB64, MPB57 and MPB70 from M. bovis BCG. The upstreams and structural genes were characterized. The gene for alpha antigen of
Mycobacterium
kansasii was also characterized. The gene for alpha antigen of M. kansasii (k-alpha) was chosen for the further study at first. This gene was fused with shuttle plasmid PIJ666-PAL5000 obtained from T. Kisser and transfected to M. bovis BCG (Tokyo). Transformant was obtained by a selection with kanamycin. It was able to secrete k-alpha antigen. DNA-containing a B-cell epitope (Glu-12-Leu-Asp-Arg-Trp-Glu-
Lys
-Ile-19) of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 P17 gag was fused to this vector at C terminal of k-alpha. Using this vector, we have succeeded to express foreign antigen in M. bovis BCG. The products were analyzed in one or two dimensional electro-phoresis. The results thus obtained will be reported elsewhere.
...
PMID:[Study on recombinant BCG]. 194 33
Several methods of coating whole cells of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis H37 RV to ELISA microtitre plates were compared with the aim of developing an ELISA screening assay for murine monoclonal antibodies in culture supernatants and human antibodies in patient sera. Undercoats of nylon or poly-L-
lysine
were compared to polystyrene as adsorptive surfaces for the bacteria, the effect of increased ionic strength and iclusion of SDS in the coating buffer measured, and methanol (70%) and glutaraldehyde (5%) investigated for their efficiency as fixatives of the bacterial monolayers. The results suggest PBS as a satisfactory coating buffer for the bacterial cells on polystyrene, and 70% methanol the preferred fixative for the dried antigen-coated plates.
...
PMID:Polystyrene, poly-L-lysine and nylon as adsorptive surfaces for the binding of whole cells of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37 RV to ELISA plates. 212 47
Aspartokinase activity was detected in extracts from
Mycobacterium
leprae (recovered from armadillo liver) and in
Mycobacterium
avium grown axenically and in vivo. Homoserine dehydrogenase activity was only detected in M. leprae and in M. avium grown axenically. Activities, when detected, were 50 to 70% lower in M. leprae or M. avium grown in vivo than in axenically grown M. avium. In these two pathogenic mycobacteria, aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase are subject to feedback inhibition by methionine - an additional regulator over those observed for the enzymes from
Mycobacterium
smegmatis. Intact mycobacterium incorporated carbon from [U-14C]aspartate into the aspartate family of amino acids (threonine, isoleucine, methionine and
lysine
) though the rate of incorporation in M. avium grown in vivo was about half that in M. avium grown axenically.
...
PMID:Aspartate metabolism in Mycobacterium avium grown in host tissue and axenically and in Mycobacterium leprae. 219 Oct 78
Human peripheral blood monocytes/macrophages derived from normal donors, patients of tuberculoid leprosy (BT/TT) and lepromatous leprosy (BL/LL) were assayed for stimulated phagocytic responses to the potent macrophage stimulator "Tuftsin" (NH2-Thr-
Lys
-Pro-Arg-OH) after varying periods (6 h to 14 days) of culture in vitro. The assays consisted of visual scoring of ingested
Mycobacterium
leprae and radiometric measurement of ingested 14C-acetate labelled Staphylococcus aureus and
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis (H37Ra). While normal and BT/TT macrophages showed a progressively increasing ability for tuftsin-stimulated phagocytosis with increasing age of culture in vitro, BL/LL macrophages showed the opposite response so that 14-day cultures were refractory to a stimulatory dose of up to 7.0 microM (10 to 20 times the optimal dose for normal and BT/TT macrophages). The 14-day BL/LL macrophage cultures were, however, responsive to 35 microM tuftsin (100 times the optimal dose for normal macrophages). Analysis of the dose-response curves also indicates that BT/TT cultures despite exhibiting an apparent similarity to normal macrophages demonstrate a rightward shift for a maximal stimulated phagocytosis. Finally SEM photo-micrographs of 14-day macrophage cultures of the three groups revealed that while normal and BT/TT cultures demonstrated an increase in membrane ruffling and filopodia on stimulation with 0.8 microM tuftsin, BL/LL cultures exhibited none of the features associated with stimulation. From the above findings, we conclude that lepromatous macrophages may display an aberrant differentiation profile leading to a terminal state of unresponsiveness and that the defect may possibly lie at the level of tuftsin receptor expression or transmembrane signal transduction.
...
PMID:Modulation of human lepromatous monocyte-macrophage functions in vitro by tuftsin. 229 63
Mycobacterium
leprae induces T cell reactivity and protective immunity in the majority of exposed individuals, but the minority that develop leprosy exhibit various types of immunopathology. Thus, the definition of epitopes on M. leprae antigens that are recognized by T cells from different individuals might result in the development of an effective vaccine against leprosy. A sequence from the 65-kD protein of this organism was recognized by two HLA-DR2-restricted, M. leprae-specific helper T cell clones that were derived from a tuberculoid leprosy patient. Synthetic peptides were used to define this epitope as Leu-Gln-Ala-Ala-Pro-Ala-Leu-Asp-
Lys
-Leu. A similar peptide that was derived from the third hypervariable region of the HLA-DR2 chain, Glu-Gln-Ala-Arg-Ala-Ala-Val-Asp-Thr-Tyr, also activated the same clones. The unexpected cross-reactivity of this M. leprae-specific DR2-restricted T cell epitope with a DR2 peptide may have to be considered in the design of subunit vaccines against leprosy.
...
PMID:A Mycobacterium leprae-specific human T cell epitope cross-reactive with an HLA-DR2 peptide. 245 78
Mycobacterium
smegmatis grows best on L-asparagine as a sole nitrogen source; this was confirmed. [14C]Aspartate was taken up rapidly (46 nmol.mg dry cells-1.h-1 from 1 mM L-asparagine) and metabolised to CO2 as well as to amino acids synthesised through the aspartate pathway. Proportionately more radioactivity appeared in the amino acids in bacteria grown in medium containing low nitrogen. Activities of aspartokinase and homoserine dehydrogenase, the initial enzymes of the aspartate pathway, were carried by separate proteins. Aspartokinase was purified as three isoenzymes and represented up to 8% of the soluble protein of M. smegmatis. All three isoenzymes contained molecular mass subunits of 50 kDa and 11 kDa which showed no activity individually; full enzyme activity was recovered on pooling the subunits. Km values for aspartate were: aspartokinases I and III, 2.4 mM; aspartokinase II, 6.4 mM. Aspartokinase I was inhibited by threonine and homoserine and aspartokinase III by
lysine
, but aspartokinase II was not inhibited by any amino acids. Aspartokinase activity was repressed by methionine and
lysine
with a small residue of activity attributable to unrepressed aspartokinase I. Homoserine dehydrogenase activity was 96% inhibited by 2 mM threonine; isoleucine, cysteine and valine had lesser effects and in combination gave additive inhibition. Homoserine dehydrogenase was repressed by threonine and leucine. Only amino acids synthesised through the aspartate pathway were tested for inhibition and repression. Of these, only one, meso-diaminopimilate, had no discernable effect on either enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Metabolism of aspartate in Mycobacterium smegmatis. 249 80
Syntrophism (cross-feeding) could be demonstrated between mutants of
Mycobacterium
fortuitum and
Mycobacterium
smegmatis, and previously characterized mutants of Bacillus subtilis, auxotrophic for arginine, histidine,
lysine
or phenylalanine. Based on this cross-feeding data, the possible site of blockage in the biosynthetic pathways of the mutants could be inferred.
...
PMID:Partial characterization of Mycobacterium fortuitum and Mycobacterium smegmatis auxotrophs by syntrophism using Bacillus subtilis. 263 68
We conducted an immunohistochemical search for mycobacteria in the intestinal tissues of patients with Crohn's disease. Tissues obtained by biopsy or surgical resection and fixed by a variety of methods (formalin, periodate-
lysine
-paraformaldehyde, fresh-frozen) were reacted by an immunoperoxidase method with antibodies to (a)
Mycobacterium
paratuberculosis strain linda, (b) M. tuberculosis, and (c) the common mycobacterial antigen, lipoarabinomannan. Each of the antibody preparations was shown capable of detecting a variety of typical and atypical mycobacteria (M. tuberculosis, M. kansasii, M. fortuitum, M. chelonei, M. paratuberculosis, and cell wall-defective as well as cell wall-intact forms of M. avium intracellulare) under conditions identical to those used for staining the patients' tissues. We did not detect mycobacteria in any of the 67 specimens from 30 patients examined. These results, in conjunction with those of our previous serologic studies, do not support the hypothesis that infection with a
Mycobacterium
causes Crohn's disease.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical examination for mycobacteria in intestinal tissues from patients with Crohn's disease. 279 67
For the detection of the synthesis in vitro of anti-
Mycobacterium
leprae antibodies in various tissues of leprosy patients, biopsy specimens of skin lesions, nasal mucosa, larynx, lymph nodes, and bone marrow were cultured in a medium containing 14C-labeled
lysine
and isoleucine. The culture fluids were analyzed by crossed immunoelectrophoresis with intermediate gel and autoradiography. The results show that synthesis of anti-M. leprae antibodies occurs at the investigated sites of leprosy patients and that the specificities of the synthesized antibodies differ between sites in individual patients. It is conceivable that these antibodies play a role in the local defense against M. leprae.
...
PMID:In vitro synthesis of antimycobacterial antibodies with different specificities in various tissues of leprosy patients. 306 20
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