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Query: UMLS:C0026936 (Mycoplasma)
14,761 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Membranes of six spiroplasma strains belonging to different Spiroplasma species and subgroups were isolated by a combination of osmotic lysis and sonication in the presence of EDTA to block endogenous phospholipase activity. Analysis of membrane lipids showed that in addition to free and esterified cholesterol the spiroplasmas incorporated exogenous phospholipids from the growth medium. Sphingomyelin was preferentially incorporated from phosphatidylcholine-sphingomyelin vesicles or from the serum used to supplement the growth medium. Palmitate was incorporated better than oleate into membrane lipids synthesized by the organisms during growth. The major phospholipid synthesized by the spiroplasmas was phosphatidylglycerol. The positional distribution of the fatty acids in phosphatidylglycerol of Spiroplasma floricola resembled that found in Mycoplasma species, in which the saturated fatty acids prefer position 2 in the glycerol backbone and not position 1 as found in Acholeplasma species and elsewhere in nature. Electron paramagnetic resonance analysis of spin-labeled fatty acids incorporated into S. floricola membranes exhibited homogeneous single-component spectra without immobilized regions. The S. floricola membranes were more rigid than those of Acholeplasma laidlawii and less rigid than those of Mycoplasma gallisepticum.
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PMID:Spiroplasma membrane lipids. 298 96

The membrane-bound ATPase of Mycoplasma gallisepticum selectively hydrolyzed purine nucleoside triphosphates and dATP. ADP, although not a substrate, inhibited ATP hydrolysis. The enzyme exhibited a pH optimum of 7.0 to 7.5 and an obligatory requirement for divalent cations. Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide at a concentration of 1 mM inhibited 95% of the ATPase activity at 37 degrees C, with 50% inhibition occurring at 22 microM dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. Sodium or potassium (or both) failed to stimulate activity by greater than 37%. Azide (2.6 mM), diethylstilbestrol (100 micrograms/ml), p-chloromercuribenzoate (1 mM), and vanadate (50 microM) inhibited 50, 91, 89, and 60%, respectively. The ATPase activity could not be removed from the membrane without detergent solubilization. Although most detergents inactivated the enzyme, the dipolar ionic detergent N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate (0.1%) solubilized approximately 70% of the enzyme with only a minor loss in activity. The extraction led to a twofold increase in specific activity and retention of inhibition by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and ADP. Glycerol greatly increased the stability of the solubilized enzyme. The properties of the membrane-bound ATPase are not consistent with any known ATPase. We postulate that the ATPase functions as an electrogenic proton pump.
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PMID:Characterization and solubilization of the membrane-bound ATPase of Mycoplasma gallisepticum. 316 71

The cell membrane of Mycoplasma mobile was isolated by either ultrasonic or French press treatment of intact cells. The membrane fraction contained all of the cellular lipids, but only one-third of cellular proteins and had a density of 1.14 g ml-1. The soluble fraction contained the NADH dehydrogenase activity of the cells, as well as a protein with an apparent molecular mass of 55 kDa that was phosphorylated in the presence of ATP. Lipid analyses of M. mobile membranes revealed that membrane lipid could be labelled by radioactive glycerol, oleate and to a much higher extent by palmitate but not by acetic acid. The membrane lipid fraction was composed of 54% neutral and 46% polar lipid. The major constituents of the neutral lipid fraction were free fatty acid, free cholesterol and cholesterol esters (45, 25 and 20%, respectively, of total neutral lipid fraction). The free cholesterol count was 13% (w/w) of total membrane lipids with a cholesterol:phospholipid molar ratio of about 0.9. Among the polar lipids, both phospho- and glycolipids were detected. The phospholipid fraction consisted of a major de novo-synthesized phosphatidylglycerol (approximately 63% of total phospholipids), plus exogenous phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin incorporated in an unchanged form from the growth medium. The glycolipid fraction was dominated by a single glycolipid (approximately 90% of total glycolipids) that was preferentially labelled by palmitic acid and showed a very high saturated:unsaturated fatty acids ratio.
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PMID:Characterization of membrane components of the flask-shaped mycoplasma Mycoplasma mobile. 325 10

The metabolism of various organic substrates by suspensions of Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides in a salts solution was followed by microcalorimetry. Enthalpy changes associated with metabolism were in good agreement with theoretical values. Substrate utilization showed Michaelis kinetics, allowing saturation constants (Km) and maximum specific rates of substrate utilization (Vmax) to be determined. In cells grown on a complex medium containing glucose, Km values were: glucose, fructose, N-acetylglucosamine, glycerol and pyruvate, less than 5 microM; lactate, 20 microM; glucosamine, 130 microns, and mannose, 1 mM. Values of Vmax for glycerol, pyruvate and lactate were similar and approximately twice those for glucose, mannose, glucosamine and N-acetylglucosamine; Vmax for fructose was one-quarter of that for glucose. In cells grown on complex medium in which glucose was replaced by mannose, glucosamine or N-acetylglucosamine, Vmax and Km for the respective growth sugars and for glucose were not significantly affected. However, in cells grown in the presence of fructose, Vmax for fructose increased to the value observed for glucose. It is suggested that M. mycoides is adapted to, and is constitutive for, the utilization of a single sugar (glucose), and a single amino sugar (N-acetylglucosamine), but that in the presence of fructose a fructose-utilizing pathway is induced.
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PMID:Kinetics of utilization of organic substrates by Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides in a salts solution: a flow-microcalorimetric study. 390 37

Thin sections of Spiroplasma citri, a mycoplasma-like organism isolated from citrus infected with "Stubborn" disease, showed the organisms to be limited by a single trilaminar plasma membrane. An additional outer layer could, however, be frequently seen in freeze-etched preparations of unwashed cells. The organisms were found to be extremely sensitive to lysis by osmotic shock. The cell membrane of S. citri isolated in this way resembled that of mycoplasmas in ultrastructure and gross chemical composition. The isolated membranes showed the characteristic trilaminar shape in section and the typical particle-studded fracture faces in freeze-etched preparations. Protein and lipid formed over 80% of the total dry weight of the membrane, which had a density of ~1.180 g/cm(3). Cholesterol constituted over 20% of the total membrane lipid. Phosphatidyl-glycerol, synthesized by the organisms, was the major phospholipid. Significant amounts of hexosamine (15 to 35 mug/mg of membrane protein) could be found in the membrane preparations. Our results support the thesis that S. citri does not possess a cell wall, either of the gram-positive or the gram-negative type, though it may be coated by some other type of an envelope or by a slime layer, at least temporarily.
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PMID:Isolation, chemical composition, and ultrastructural features of the cell membrane of the mycoplasma-like organism Spiroplasma citri. 412 33

1. Total lipid was extracted from Mycoplasma laidlawii strain B with chloroform-methanol mixtures and fractionated into neutral lipid, glycolipid and phospholipid components by chromatography on silicic acid. 2. Saponification of the glycolipid fraction, which represented nearly half of the total lipid, yielded two glycosides for which the structures O-alpha-d-glucopyranosyl-(1-->1)-d-glycerol and O-alpha-d-glucopyranosyl-(1-->2)-O-alpha-d-glucopyranosyl-(1-->1)-d-glycerol were established. 3. The ratio of monoglucosyl diglyceride to diglucosyl diglyceride increased with the age of the culture, though the total glycolipid concentration remained virtually constant. The glycolipid concentration was unaffected by the addition of cholesterol to the culture medium. 4. The phospholipid fraction consisted of two components, phosphatidylglucose and phosphatidylglycerol. Organisms harvested at acidic pH also contained O-amino acyl esters of phosphatidylglycerol. No lipids containing inositol could be detected.
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PMID:The lipid composition of Mycoplasma laidlawii strain B. 429 44

The uptake of (14)C-alpha-methyl-d-glucoside (alphaMG) by washed cells of Mycoplasma strain Y was found to be dependent on the supply of metabolic energy. Glycerol or d-mannose, but not l-lactate, would serve as an energy source. Uptake was inhibited by fluoride, iodoacetate, and arsenate, but not by 2,4-dinitrophenol. d-Glucose was inhibitory, presumably by competing for the transport system. The initial product of accumulation had the properties of a phosphate ester of alphaMG. The proportion of free alphaMG in the cells increased with time, until a steady state was reached in which uptake was balanced by the efflux of free alphaMG from the cells. Broken-cell preparations catalyzed a phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphorylation of alphaMG and of d-glucose.
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PMID:Evidence for a phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent sugar phosphotransferase in Mycoplasma strain Y. 505 67

Cholesterol, free fatty acids, and phosphatidic acid are the predominant lipids of a T strain of Mycoplasma. The remaining neutral lipids are composed of cholesteryl esters, triglycerides, and diglycerides. Three glucose-containing glycolipids are present in trace amounts. In addition to phosphatidic acid, the phospholipids are comprised of phosphatidyl glycerol, diphosphatidyl glycerol, and phosphatidyl ethanolamine. Another polar lipid was found to be ninhydrin-positive and phosphate-free. It appears to be a diamino hydroxy compound containing adjacent fatty acid ester and N-acyl groups.
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PMID:Lipids of a T strain of Mycoplasma. 505 44

The total lipid content of Mycoplasma neurolyticum comprises about 14% of the dry weight of the organisms and is about equally distributed between the phospholipid and the neutral-glycolipid fractions. The neutral lipids were identified as triglycerides, diglycerides, and cholesterol. The glycolipid fraction contained 1-O-beta-glucopyranosyl-d-2,3-diglyceride and 1-[O-beta-d-glycopyranosyl-(1-->6)-O-beta-d-glucopyranosyl]-d-2,3-diglyceride. The latter lipid is structurally identical to the diglucosyl diglyceride which occurs in Staphylococcus aureus. The phospholipids of the organism consist of a fully acylated glycerophosphoryl-glycerophosphoryl glycerol, phosphatidic acid, diphosphatidyl glycerol, phosphatidyl glycerol, and amino acyl esters of phosphatidyl glycerol. Phosphatidic acid and phosphatidyl glycerol account for greater than 90% of the phospholipids of organisms in the exponential phase of growth. The predominant fatty acids found in all of the acyl lipids were palmitic, stearic, and oleic acids.
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PMID:Lipid composition of Mycoplasma neurolyticum. 507 74

The lipids of the sterol nonrequiring Mycoplasma strain S743 were found to include both ester glycerophosphatides (phosphatidylglycerol, acylphosphatidylglycerol, and diphosphatidylglycerol) and ceramide glycerophosphate compounds containing N-hydroxyacyl groups. The major phosphosphingolipid was tentatively identified as a hydroxyceramidephosphorylglycerol containing an O-acyl group. These compounds became labeled during growth in the presence of (32)P-orthophosphate, (14)C-glycerol, or (14)C-palmitate. The lipid fraction also contained free long-chain base. (14)C-palmitate was converted to labeled sphinganine. The long-chain base composition of the lipids was modified by growing the organisms in media containing different fatty acids, which were converted to bases containing two more C atoms per molecule. Ninety per cent of the long-chain base from cells grown in medium supplemented with elaidate consisted of monounsaturated C(20) base.
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PMID:Lipids of a sterol-nonrequiring Mycoplasma. 548 36


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