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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antibiotic-resistant and auxotrophic mutants of Bordetella
pertussis
were isolated. These were used as recipients for the uptake from Escherichia coli of broad-host-range R plasmids R68.45, RP1, and RP1 and RP4 carrying transposons Tn501 and Tn7 respectively. B.
pertussis
transconjugants from these crosses were used as donors to mobilize StrR, NalR, thr+ and gly+ chromosomal markers to B.
pertussis
or to B. parapertussis recipient strains. The frequency of plasmid transfer varied and depended on the donor and recipient strains used. Differences in chromosome mobilization frequencies of individual markers were observed and appeared to depend on the presence or absence of transposons Tn501 and Tn7 on the plasmid. Linkage was detected between the gly+ and NalR markers.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1986 Oct
PMID:R-plasmid-mediated chromosome mobilization in Bordetella pertussis. 288 25
A gene library of Bordetella
pertussis
DNA was constructed in Escherichia coli using the broad-host-range cosmid vector pLAFR1. The average insert size was 24.9 kb. From 500 members of the gene library, clones were identified which complemented trpE, glnA and Thr- mutations in E. coli but none which complemented trpD, trpC, trpB, trpA, proA or Leu- mutations. Four clones were identified which complemented trpE in E. coli. Anthranilate synthase activity was detected in a trpE strain only when it harboured a plasmid from one of these clones; activity was repressed when tryptophan was included in the growth medium. Two clones were identified which complemented glnA of E. coli. A recombinant plasmid from one of these clones also restored some of the nitrogen acquisition functions of glnG and glnL in E. coli. Expression of several B.
pertussis
virulence-associated products (haemolysin, heat-labile toxin, adenylate cyclase, filamentous haemagglutinin, and the cell-envelope polypeptide of Mr 30,000) was not detected in 500 independent clones. However, by transferring the recombinant plasmids to a mutant of B.
pertussis
deficient in haemolysin and adenylate cyclase, a plasmid was identified which restored both these activities.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1986 Nov
PMID:Complementation of mutations in Escherichia coli and Bordetella pertussis by B. pertussis DNA cloned in a broad-host-range cosmid vector. 288 29
A repeated DNA sequence in the genome of Bordetella
pertussis
has been demonstrated. At least 20 copies of this sequence could be observed in either BamHI or EcoRI restriction enzyme digests of chromosomal DNA; fragments carrying the repeated DNA sequence ranged in size from about 1.5 to 20 kbp. The repeated DNA sequence was cloned from two separate regions of the B.
pertussis
genome, as shown by restriction enzyme site maps of the two clones and by hybridization studies. A small number of differences in the pattern of hybridization of the repeated DNA sequence to chromosomal DNA from several strains of B.
pertussis
was observed. No repeated DNA sequences were observed in one strain each of B. parapertussis and B. bronchiseptica, and there was no hybridization of B.
pertussis
DNA to Escherichia coli chromosomal DNA. The repeated DNA sequence was subcloned on a 2.54 kbp BamHI fragment from one of the two original clones. Restriction enzyme digests and hybridization studies showed that the repeated DNA sequence was about 1 kbp in size and had a single, internal ClaI site.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1987 Feb
PMID:Isolation of a repeated DNA sequence from Bordetella pertussis. 288 34
Bordetella
pertussis
was able to grow in vitro under conditions where the only iron present was bound to the iron-binding proteins ovotransferrin, transferrin or lactoferrin. Under these conditions the bacteria produced neither hydroxamate nor phenolate-catecholate siderophores to assist in the procurement of iron. Examination of B.
pertussis
outer-membrane preparations by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting showed that the iron-binding protein ovotransferrin was bound directly to the bacterial surface. Assays of the binding of radiolabelled transferrin by the bacteria showed that the association was a specific process and that there was turnover of the bound proteins. Competitive binding assays indicated that lactoferrin could be bound in the same way. It is suggested that B.
pertussis
obtains iron directly from host iron-binding proteins during infection.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1987 Apr
PMID:Interaction of lactoferrin and transferrins with the outer membrane of Bordetella pertussis. 288 36
The hybrid plasmid pRH119 was constructed on the basis of vector plasmid pUC19 and shown to carry Bordetella
pertussis
PT operon in the same transcriptional orientation with the lac-promoter of the vector plasmid. Expression of PT genes in E. coli cells harbouring pRH119 was not registered. Weak expression of PT genes was found by immunoscreening of recombinant clones in situ with antiserum against PT when PT genes were put closer to lac-promoter. 0.95 kb SalGI fragment was deleted from pRH119. The derivative plasmid pRH122 was digested by SalGI and the ends were polymerized to "blunt" by polIK and ligated. The obtained plasmid pRH122K was deleted for 40 bp in XbaI site by Bal31 deletion. The lysate of E. coli cells harbouring the resulting plasmid pRH134 passed through Sepharose 4B with covalently bound immunoglobulins from antiserum against PT. The eluted protein contains S2 multimers identified by immunoblotting. The experiments with CHO-cells and active mice protection have shown the absence of S2 multimers protectiveness.
Mol
Gen
Mikrobiol Virusol 1987 Dec
PMID:[Identification of protein products of the operon for leukocytosis (lymphocytosis)-stimulating factor from Bordetella pertussis cloned in Escherichia coli]. 289 91
The absence of subunit S3 in cell-associated
pertussis
toxin (PT) from a mutant of Bordetella
pertussis
which failed to produce cell-free toxin suggested that this subunit was involved in the release of PT into the culture medium. The addition of methylated beta-cyclodextrin (MCD) to the culture medium caused a small but consistent increase in the release of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) by four wild-type strains of B.
pertussis
. Since previous studies have shown that MCD also enhances the levels of PT in culture supernates, it seemed probable that the increased shedding of outer-membranes vesicles (OMV) may explain the increased levels of both cell-free PT and LPS. Release of PT was inhibited in media buffered with HEPES but was unaffected in Tris/HC1 buffer. This suggested that in addition to shedding of the outer membrane, increased permeability and greater destabilization of the outer membrane, as caused by Tris/HC1 buffer, may be important in the release of PT. Our data do not support the idea that PT is packaged into OMV because only an insignificant proportion (0.01%) of the total cell-free PT was associated with LPS. The association of PT with small micelles derived from outer-membrane amphiphiles may be more important since the LPS content of PT purified from culture supernates (containing no large OMV) was nearly 18% by weight.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1987 Sep
PMID:Release of pertussis toxin and its interaction with outer-membrane antigens. 289 25
Some properties of bacteriophage phi T isolated from the vaccine strain Bordetella
pertussis
Tohama phase I and propagated in Bordetella parapertussis 504 cells are presented. Phage phi T belongs to the IV group in accordance with Tikhonenko classification. The diameter of head and length of noncontractile tail sheath are 49.5 +/- 0.5 and 145 +/- 7 nm, respectively. Diameter of the tail sheath is 3.2 +/- 0.6 nm. Molecular mass of the phage DNA is 37 +/- 3 kb. Population of phi T phage is polymorphous and consists of particles the genomes or which vary from each other by the "insert" located 6.8 +/- 0.6 kb from the end of molecule. The blot hybridization has demonstrated that the bacteriophage genome is not inserted into the chromosome of the lysogenic strain. Autonomous location of the phage genome in the host cell is suggested. The temperature and hydrogen ions concentration effects on bacteriophage phi T stability were studied. The conditions for phage suspension storage are described.
Mol
Gen
Mikrobiol Virusol 1988 Apr
PMID:[Isolation and characteristics of the bacteriophage from the vaccine strain Tohama phase I]. 290 Apr 62
The effect of secreted virulence components of Bordetella
pertussis
on chemiluminescence (CL) of rabbit peritoneal neutrophils was determined with the chemotactic peptide N'-formyl-L-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine (fMLP) or intact B.
pertussis
as the stimulus.
Pertussis
toxin (PT) inhibited the response to fMLP in a dose-dependent manner, although only after the neutrophils had been exposed to the toxin for greater than 15 min. Both filamentous haemagglutinin (FHA) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) markedly enhanced the CL response to fMLP after greater than or equal to 15 min incubation with the neutrophils. Similar effects to those of B.
pertussis
LPS were also seen with smooth and rough LPS from Salmonella minnesota. With the lowest dose of each component which elicited a maximal effect on CL, the inhibitory effect of PT overrode the enhancing effect of FHA and B.
pertussis
LPS. Pre-incubation of neutrophils with PT, FHA or B.
pertussis
LPS caused a slight reduction in the subsequent CL response to virulent B.
pertussis
Tohama. Virulent (phase I, or X-mode) organisms of B.
pertussis
18334 and B.
pertussis
Tohama induced greater neutrophil CL than their avirulent (C-mode) derivatives. There appeared to be an inverse correlation between bacterial hydrophilicity and the ability to induce neutrophil CL: X-mode bacteria were significantly less hydrophilic than C-mode organisms. Three mutants, the adenylate cyclase (AC)- and haemolysin (HLY)-deficient B.
pertussis
BP348, the FHA-deficient B.
pertussis
BP353, and the PT-deficient B.
pertussis
BP357, generated similar levels of CL and had similar hydrophilicity values. The hydrophilicity value of the avirulent mutant B.
pertussis
BP347 (deficient in AC, HLY, FHA and PT) and the CL induced by this strain were similar to those of B.
pertussis
C-mode organisms. Thus, the interaction of B.
pertussis
with neutrophils appears to be complex, reflecting both the alteration of leucocyte function by secreted virulence components of the organism and, in the absence of opsonins, the surface properties of the bacterium.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1988 Aug
PMID:Interaction of Bordetella pertussis virulence components with neutrophils: effect on chemiluminescence induced by a chemotactic peptide and by intact bacteria. 290 18
A repeating element of DNA has been isolated and sequenced from the genome of Bordetella
pertussis
. Restriction map analysis of this element shows single internal ClaI, SphI, BstEII and SalI sites. Over 40 DNA fragments are seen in ClaI digests of B.
pertussis
genomic DNA to which the repetitive DNA sequence hybridizes. Sequence analysis of the repeat reveals that it has properties consistent with bacterial insertion sequence (IS) elements. These properties include its length of 1053 bp, multiple copy number and presence of 28 bp of near-perfect inverted repeats at its termini. Unlike most IS elements, the presence of this element in the B.
pertussis
genome is not associated with a short duplication in the target DNA sequence. This repeating element is not found in the genomes of B. parapertussis or B. bronchiseptica. Analysis of a DNA fragment adjacent to one copy of the repetitive DNA sequence has identified a different repeating element which is found in nine copies in B. parapertussis and four copies in B.
pertussis
, suggesting that there may be other repeating DNA elements in the different Bordetella species. Computer analysis of the B.
pertussis
repetitive DNA element has revealed no significant nucleotide homology between it and any other bacterial transposable elements, suggesting that this repetitive sequence is specific for B.
pertussis
.
J
Gen
Microbiol 1988 Aug
PMID:Nucleotide sequence and characterization of a repetitive DNA element from the genome of Bordetella pertussis with characteristics of an insertion sequence. 290 19
A panel of monoclonal antibodies has been developed against the T alpha, T beta and T gamma subunits of bovine transducin. Two anti-T alpha antibodies from this panel (TF15 and TF16) and a third one (4A) against frog T alpha (Witt, P. L., Hamm, H. E., and Bownds, M. D. (1984) J.
Gen
. Physiol. 84, 251-263) were characterized. Each of these monoclonal antibodies recognizes a different region of T alpha and has a specific effect on the function of transducin. The binding of TF15 is reversibly enhanced by treating T alpha with either 1 M guanidinium chloride or, to a smaller extent, by the removal of bound guanine nucleotide. Its epitope is located in a 12-kDa tryptic fragment containing the binding site for the guanine moiety of GTP. Taken together, these results support previous observations that the conformation of T alpha is modulated by the occupancy of the guanine nucleotide binding site. In contrast to TF15, TF16 recognizes only the native form of T alpha. Its epitope resides within the central portion of the T alpha molecule. While T alpha-bound TF16 does not inhibit either
pertussis
toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation, rhodopsin binding, or transducin subunit interaction, it blocks both the light-activated uptake of guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) and the GTP-dependent elution of transducin from photolyzed rhodopsin. These effects are unlikely to be caused by the occupation of the guanine nucleotide binding site by TF16 because this antibody quantitatively precipitates T alpha-GTP gamma S. We propose that bound TF16 locks T alpha in a conformation that prevents the entrance of guanine nucleotide and favors T beta gamma association. In contrast to TF16, the epitope of 4A was mapped to the amino-terminal region of T alpha. This monoclonal antibody blocks
pertussis
toxin-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation, GTP gamma S uptake, and T alpha-T beta gamma association. Moreover, the binding site for 4A becomes inaccessible when transducin binds to photolyzed rhodopsin. These results suggest that the inhibitory effects of 4A are due to a simultaneous steric blockage of both the interaction of T alpha with T beta gamma and their binding to photolyzed rhodopsin. The results obtained from these studies are correlated with the structure and function of T alpha.
...
PMID:Characterization of transducin from bovine retinal rod outer segments. Use of monoclonal antibodies to probe the structure and function of the subunit. 312 13
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