Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026918 (Mycobacterium)
52,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A water-extract from hydrogenolyzed cells of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain Aoyama B was separated into four portions (F-1 to F-4 fractions) by gel filtration with a Sephadex G-100 column. The third peak (called MAF3) eluted from the column was the most adjuvant-active fraction. The molecular weight determined by gel filtration was around 16 000 daltons. MAF3 consisted of heteropolymer(s) composed of approximately 76 to 79% neutral sugars (Ara, Gal, Man, and Glc) and 19% mucopeptide (MurN, GlcN, Glu, Ala, Dpm, Gly, Asp, Thr, Ser, Leu, Lys, Arg, His, Pro, Tyr, and Phe). The adjuvanticities of MAF3 and other fractions in water-in-oil emulsion were estimated by the enhancing effect on immune response to egg albumin (EA) in guinea pigs. MAF3 stimulated the production of humoral antibodies, particularly IgG2 antibody specific to the antigen, and induced delayed type hypersensitivity against EA in the skin and cornea of antigen-primed guinea pigs. These adjuvanticities of MAF3 were similar to the characteristics of mycobacterial cell wall in Freund's complete adjuvant.
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PMID:Separation of a water-soluble adjuvant (MAF3) from delipidated cells of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain Aoyama B by hydrogenolysis and gel filtration. 82 53

Adjuvant arthritis induced by mycobacteria in rats is a widely used model of chronic arthritis. A previously described nonapeptide (Thr-Phe-Gly-Leu-Gln-Leu-Glu-Leu-Thr, amino acid sequence 180-188) from the recombinant 65 kDa heat shock protein of Mycobacterium bovis BCG, which was found to contain a T-cell epitope recognized by both arthritogenic and protective T-cell clones in vitro, has been investigated for its vaccination and therapeutic potential in adjuvant arthritis in rats. The nonapeptide was found not to be arthritogenic, although the T cells from nonapeptide immunized rats cross-react in vitro with mycobacterial antigens. Intraperitoneal administration of 0.1 mg nonapeptide in oil at day -20 or days -2, -1 and 0, resulted in a marked reduction of incidence and severity of adjuvant arthritis. The disease process and severity were also influenced by therapeutic treatment with 0.1 mg nonapeptide injected intraperitoneally at days 7 to 10. Interestingly, subplantar or intravenous application of the nonapeptide had no influence on the disease process. Deletion of the N-terminal threonine led to complete loss of in vivo activity of the nonapeptide.
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PMID:Treatment of adjuvant arthritis in rats: vaccination potential of a synthetic nonapeptide from the 65 kDa heat shock protein of mycobacteria. 169 14

Adjuvant arthritis in Lewis rats is a model of T cell-mediated autoimmune arthritis resembling human rheumatoid arthritis. A nonapeptide from the 65-kD heat-shock protein of Mycobacterium bovis BCG, amino acid sequence 180-188, has been described to carry the dominant immunogenic epitope(s) for both arthritis-protective and arthritogenic T cell clones. Here we demonstrate that immunizations with the synthetic nonapeptide completely protected rats against adjuvant arthritis induced by M. tuberculosis. Interestingly, deletion of the N-terminal threonine of the nonapeptide resulted in loss of the protective activity. Pretreatments with the nonapeptide resulted in an immune response to the nonapeptide and to M. tuberculosis. After immunizations with the synthetic nonapeptide, only low titres of nonapeptide-specific antibodies were produced, whereas a significant cellular immune response to the nonapeptide was observed. In addition, the protection was transferable to naive rats by spleen T cells. These findings document the requirement of a T cell-specific immune response to the dominant epitope of the 65-kD mycobacterial heat-shock protein for the protection against adjuvant arthritis and suggest the feasibility of immune intervention in autoimmune arthritis through the use of synthetic peptides.
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PMID:Prevention of adjuvant arthritis in rats by a nonapeptide from the 65-kD mycobacterial heat-shock protein. 169 60

Strains from the Mycobacterium fortuitum complex contain surface species-specific lipids allowing their precise identification. In M. fortuitum biovar. peregrinum two major glycopeptidolipids, of the C-mycoside type, were characterized by a combination of chemical analyses, NMR, and FAB mass spectrometry. Important information was obtained by mass spectrometry both on their molecular weight and on the peptide and saccharide sequences without any derivatization. The basic structure of the two compounds was shown to be [formula: see text] The disaccharide part linked O-glycosidically to alaninol was either 3,4-di-O-methyl-alpha-L-rhamnopyranosyl (1----2) 3,4-di-O-methyl-alpha-L-rhamnopyranoside (mycoside I) or 3-O-methyl-alpha-L-rhamnopyranosyl (1----2) 3,4-di-O-methyl-alpha-L-rhamnopyranoside (mycoside II). This is an unusual structure of a C-mycoside since neither 6-deoxytalose nor its derivatives are present. Moreover, the oligosaccharide part is linked to the alaninol residue instead of the allo-threonine.
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PMID:Glycopeptidolipids from Mycobacterium fortuitum: a variant in the structure of C-mycoside. 193 76

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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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PMID:Metabolism of aspartate in Mycobacterium smegmatis. 249 80

Earlier work from this and other laboratories has revealed the presence within Mycobacterium spp. of three classes of glycolipid antigens which we have called the glycopeptidolipids, the lipooligosaccharides and the phenolic glycolipids. Representative structures of each from different species and sub-species have been proposed. More recently, new variants of these antigens and older structures have been analyzed by Fourier transform infrared, NMR, particularly at high temperatures, and, most notably, by fast atom bombardment and Californium desorption mass spectrometry. Extraordinary novelty and diversity were revealed, particularly at the distal non-reducing end of the oligosaccharide chains, marked by the presence of new branched-chain sugars, amino sugars and sugar acids. These epitopes and monoclonal antibodies to them have been used for the critical identification of mycobacteria. In addition, the pure antigens are the basis of specific serological tests for various mycobacterioses. The resurgence of interest in "atypical" mycobacteria stems from their occurrence as opportunistic pathogens in many patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, although they have long been associated with pulmonary and other organ infections. Foremost among these mycobacteria are serovars of the Mycobacterium avium-Mycobacterium intracellulare complex (the M. avium complex). The surface antigens which differentiate these serovars are glycopeptidolipids, related to "mycoside C" and, accordingly, composed of a glycosylated lipopeptide "core", fatty acyl-D-Phe-D-alloThr-D-Ala-L-acanyl-O- (3,4-di-O-methyl-alpha-L-rhamnopyranoside), to which a haptenic oligosaccharide is linked at the threonine substituent; this oligoglycosyl unit is the source of type specificity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Structure and function of mycobacterial glycolipids and glycopeptidolipids. 250 12

The acetone-soluble fraction extracted from lyophilized cells of Mycobacterium smegmatis ATCC 607 inhibited D4, a species-specific phage active against M. smegmatis. Evidence is presented indicating that the D4 inhibition was caused by the phage receptor substance(s) contained in this fraction. A fraction eluted from silicic acid with chloroform-methanol (95:5, v/v) showed the strongest inhibition of D4 phage. This fraction contained sugars and amino acids, and its infrared absorption spectrum was practically identical with those of the mycoside C isolated from the other species of mycobacteria. Further fractionation revealed that the active material was a mixture of several closely related peptidoglycolipids all of which showed, more or less, the phage inhibition. One of the compounds was purified and partially characterized; it contains three different amino acids, allo-threonine, alanine, and phenylalanine, at a molar ratio of 1:1:1, and also three different deoxyhexoses, probably 6-deoxytalose, 3,4-di-o-methylrhamnose, and 2,3,4-tri-o-methylrhamnose. A tentative name of "mycoside C(sm)" is proposed for this substance which possesses a slightly different structure from the known types of mycoside C and is probably specific for the species of M. smegmatis. A fraction extracted from the D4-resistant mutant of M. smegmatis ATCC 607 by acetone and then by chloroform-methanol (95:5, v/v) showed no phage inhibition and had no sugar component. In addition, this fraction contained lysine, serine, and a small amount of both glycine and an unidentified amino acid.
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PMID:Nature of the receptor substance of Mycobacterium smegmatis for D4 bacteriophage adsorption. 505 64


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