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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A genomic library of Legionella pneumophila, the causative agent of Legionnaires disease in humans, was constructed in Escherichia coli K-12, and the recombinant clones were screened by immuno-colony blots with an antiserum raised against heat-killed L. pneumophila. Twenty-three clones coding for a Legionella-specific protein of 19 kDa were isolated. The 19-kDa protein, which represents an outer
membrane protein
, was found to be associated with the peptidoglycan layer both in L. pneumophila and in the recombinant E. coli clones. This was shown by electrophoresis and Western immunoblot analysis of bacterial cell membrane fractions with a monospecific polyclonal 19-kDa protein-specific antiserum. The protein was termed peptidoglycan-associated protein of L. pneumophila (Ppl). The corresponding genetic determinant, ppl, was subcloned on a 1.8-kb ClaI fragment. DNA sequence studies revealed that two open reading frames, pplA and pplB, coding for putative proteins of 18.9 and 16.8 kDa, respectively, were located on the ClaI fragment. Exonuclease III digestion studies confirmed that pplA is the gene coding for the peptidoglycan-associated 19-kDa protein of L. pneumophila. The amino acid sequence of PplA exhibits a high degree of homology to the sequences of the Pal lipoproteins of E. coli K-12 and
Haemophilus
influenzae.
...
PMID:Cloning, genetic analysis, and nucleotide sequence of a determinant coding for a 19-kilodalton peptidoglycan-associated protein (Ppl) of Legionella pneumophila. 185 72
PedvaxHIB, a
Haemophilus
influenzae type b (Hib) conjugate vaccine composed of Hib capsular polysaccharide covalently bound to an outer
membrane protein
complex of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B, was evaluated for immunogenicity and safety in infants and children 2 months of age and older. A significant and consistent antibody response was seen after a single dose of the vaccine in all age groups, including infants as young as 2 months of age. In addition, the vaccine elicited a good booster response when given at 12 to 17 months of age. Subjects from diverse subpopulations, including those with impaired antibody response to Hib polysaccharide vaccines, showed a significant response to vaccination. The vaccine was well tolerated when administered alone or concurrently with other paediatric vaccines. A protective efficacy study, recently completed, has shown the vaccine to be highly effective in 2-month-old infants.
...
PMID:Clinical experience with PedvaxHIB, a conjugate vaccine of Haemophilus influenzae type b polysaccharide--Neisseria meningitidis outer membrane protein. 189 56
An immunodominant
Haemophilus
somnus outer
membrane protein
with an apparent molecular mass of 40 kDa on Western blots (immunoblots) of gradient sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gels was characterized because a monospecific antibody against this antigen was protective. This monospecific antibody was used for immunoaffinity purification of the antigen. The immunoaffinity-purified antigen reacted with a polyclonal antibody to the 40-kDa antigen but not with a monoclonal antibody (3G9) which reacted with the 40-kDa antigen in gradient gels. On 8 or 10% gels, the approximately 40-kDa antigen was resolved as two bands, a 40-kDa band which reacted with the protective monospecific polyclonal antibody (p40) and a band of lower molecular mass which reacted with monoclonal antibody 3G9. The latter antigen was designated p39. Both antigens were conserved in all H. somnus isolates tested. The specific antibodies were also used to detect cross-reacting antigens in other gram-negative bacteria. Antibody to p40 reacted with proteins of 55 to 28 kDa, with the greatest intensity shown among proteins from other members of the family Pasteurellaceae. Antibody to p40 was reduced by absorption with live H. somnus or other members of the family Pasteurellaceae, so the antigen appears to be surface exposed. Antibody to p39 only cross-reacted with a broad band (38 to 40 kDa) in
Haemophilus
agni. Since H. agni is not a bovine pathogen and since convalescent-phase serum from H. somnus-infected animals did recognize p39, the latter may be a good immunodiagnostic antigen, if the lack of cross-reactivity with antigens in other gram-negative bacteria is confirmed with a polyclonal antibody to p39. The cross-reactivity of antiserum to p40 with antigens of members of the family Pasteurellaceae and the ability of this antiserum to protect against H. somnus pneumonia indicate that p40 may be a useful vaccine antigen for H. somnus disease and perhaps even diseases caused by other members of the family Pasteurellaceae.
...
PMID:Characterization of immunodominant surface antigens of Haemophilus somnus. 193 91
Thirty-six consecutive patients with invasive
Haemophilus
influenzae type b (Hib) infections at Roberto del Rio Children's Hospital, Santiago, Chile, were enrolled in a prospective study. Throat cultures were obtained from household contacts of each index case, adjacent neighbors, and matched community control households. Colonization rates for H. influenzae were comparable among groups; however, among household contacts 18% of colonizing isolates were Hib, compared with 2% and 3% among neighbor and community controls. When selected isolates were evaluated further by outer
membrane protein
(OMP) profiles and multilocus enzyme electrophoresis, only one of the four Hib isolates from household members matched the corresponding index case isolate. One serologically nontypeable isolate from a household contact had an OMP profile and electrophoretic type identical to that of the corresponding Hib index case isolate; hybridization studies with a 9-kb capsular gene probe showed a profile consistent with a capsule-deficient mutant. Hib strains were isolated more frequently from household contacts than from control persons living in Santiago, but colonizing Hib strains were often unrelated to the index case strain.
...
PMID:Molecular epidemiology of Haemophilus influenzae within families in Santiago, Chile. 195 14
Eight healthy adults and 48 infants 2 and 4 months old were immunized with
Haemophilus
influenzae type b-Neisseria meningitidis outer
membrane protein
complex conjugate vaccine (PRP-OMP) to evaluate antibody kinetics in the first days after immunization. Five adults (63%) had some decrease in antibody, although the geometric mean did not decrease significantly. With one exception, the nadir occurred on postimmunization day 3. Seven had an antibody increase by day 7. Of the children, 6 (75%) of 8 and 17 (77%) of 23 had a decrease in antibody in serum obtained on day 2-3 after the first or second dose, respectively, the magnitude of which directly correlated with the preimmunization antibody concentration. However, the geometric mean did not decrease significantly. Within 1 week of immunization, 85% of infants had an increase in antibody, significantly greater after the second dose than after the first. A high concentration of maternally derived antibody before immunization correlated negatively with antibody response. Thus, a transient decrease in antibody occurs in most adults and infants 2-3 days after immunization with PRP-OMP followed by a prompt increase by day 7.
...
PMID:Serum anticapsular antibody response in the first week after immunization of adults and infants with the Haemophilus influenzae type b-Neisseria meningitidis outer membrane protein complex conjugate vaccine. 195 15
In serum-free medium in the presence of bovine aortal endothelial cells (BAOEC),
Haemophilus
influenzae type b was capable of extensive proliferation compared to that in serum-free medium alone. An unidentified low-molecular-mass (less than 2000 kDa) compound(s) was, in part, responsible for this phenomenon. There were changes in the outer-
membrane protein
profiles between broth-grown (the original inoculum) and BAOEC-grown organisms, particularly in the 45-70 kDa range. Both broth- and BAOEC-grown bacteria were serum sensitive in vitro but could be converted to a serum-resistant phenotype, resembling that found in vivo, by incubation in a serum filtrate.
...
PMID:Growth of Haemophilus influenzae type b in the presence of bovine aortal endothelial cells. 195 52
15 out of 21 patients admitted to a pulmonary rehabilitation centre were infected with a non-encapsulated strain of
Haemophilus
influenzae. All isolates showed identical outer
membrane protein
patterns, harboured a 40 MD plasmid, produced beta-lactamase, and were resistant to amoxycillin, co-trimoxazole, chloramphenicol, and tetracycline. The strain was first isolated from sputum of another 3 patients in the same hospital ward. 2 of them later introduced it into the rehabilitation centre. The strain spread among the other patients over the next 2 months. The absence of a common iatrogenic source of the organism and its slow spread indicate that the most likely means of transmission was person to person.
...
PMID:Outbreak of multiresistant non-encapsulated Haemophilus influenzae infections in a pulmonary rehabilitation centre. 197 21
To determine the opsonic effect of antibodies to Actinobacillus (
Haemophilus
) pleuropneumoniae outer membrane proteins on phagocytosis by porcine polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN), we separated the integral outer membrane proteins (IOMPs) by Triton X-114 extraction. Four major IOMPs with molecular masses of 76, 50, 39, and 29 kDa were detected by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These IOMPs were found to be essentially free of endotoxin in the Limulus amebocyte lysate assay. The 76-kDa protein exhibited a more intensely stained electrophoresis band when isolated from iron-restricted cultures, and a new band at 105 kDa was present in the whole-membrane fraction but not in the integral fraction, indicating that the 105-kDa iron-repressible protein is a peripheral
membrane protein
. The 76-, 50-, and 39-kDa proteins were shown to be surface exposed, since antibodies to these IOMPs could be absorbed out of convalescent-phase sera by whole cells. Percentages of phagocytosis by porcine PMN of A. pleuropneumoniae opsonized with convalescent-phase sera, convalescent-phase sera absorbed with IOMPs, or convalescent-phase sera absorbed with whole cells were 46.75, 21.81, and 7.96%, respectively. These results demonstrate that antibodies to IOMPs of A. pleuropneumoniae serve as important opsonins in phagocytosis by porcine PMN.
...
PMID:Immunogenicity of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae outer membrane proteins and enhancement of phagocytosis by antibodies to the proteins. 198 72
A
Haemophilus
influenzae b (Hib)
membrane protein
with a molecular mass of 28 kDa bound polyclonal antisera raised against a highly purified Hib fimbrial subunit. We cloned the gene encoding this protein and found that the gene was expressed in Escherichia coli. DNA sequence analysis identified an 843-bp open reading frame which predicted a 26.78-kDa protein with an amino-terminal signal sequence and a mature protein with 70% similarity to the 28-kDa lipoprotein of E. coli (F. Yu, S. Inouye, and M. Inouye, J. Biol. Chem. 261:2284, 1986). Colony blot hybridization analysis with an intergenic probe of the cloned gene demonstrated that 29 of 32 H. influenzae strains hybridize with this gene. Insertion of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene into the open reading frame inactivated expression of the 28-kDa protein in E. coli. Isogenic Hib strains were derived by marker exchange mutagenesis to generate mutants which no longer expressed the 28-kDa protein as recognized with Western immunoblot analysis. There was no difference in the rate of nasopharyngeal colonization of infant rats or monkeys by the isogenic mutants which lacked the 28-kDa protein compared with colonization by the wild-type strain. In contrast, the frequency of invasion and density of bacteremia in infant rats caused by the isogenic mutants were reduced relative to those caused by the wild-type Hib strain. We conclude that this 28-kDa outer
membrane protein
aids transepithelial invasion of type b strains but is not essential.
...
PMID:Contribution of a 28-kilodalton membrane protein to the virulence of Haemophilus influenzae. 198 77
The fadL gene of Escherichia coli encodes an outer
membrane protein
(FadL) that plays a central role in the uptake of exogenous long-chain fatty acids. The nucleotide sequence of the fadL gene revealed a single open reading frame of 1,344 bp encoding a protein with 448 amino acid residues and a molecular weight of 48,831. The transcriptional start, analyzed by primer extension, was shown to be 95 bp upstream from the translational start. Apparent -10 and -35 regions were found at -12 and -37 bp upstream from the transcriptional start. Three regions with hyphenated dyad symmetry (two between the transcriptional start and the translational start and one upstream from the -10 and -35 regions) were identified that may play a role in the expression of fadL. The protein product of the fadL gene contained a signal sequence and signal peptidase I cleavage site similar to that defined for other E. coli outer membrane proteins. The N-terminal sequence of mature FadL protein was determined by automated amino acid sequencing of protein purified from the outer membrane of a strain harboring fadL under the control of a T7 RNA polymerase-responsive promoter. This amino acid sequence, Ala-Gly-Phe-Gln-Leu-Asn-Glu-Phe-Ser-Ser, verified the signal peptidase I cleavage site on pre-FadL and confirmed the N-terminal amino acid sequence of FadL predicted from the DNA sequence. Mature FadL contained 421 amino acid residues, giving a molecular weight of 45,969. The amino acid composition of FadL deduced from the DNA sequence suggested that this protein contained an abundance of hydrophobic amino acid residues and lacked cysteinyl residues. The hydrophobic amino acids within FadL were predicted to contribute to at least five regions of the protein with an overall hydrophobic character. The amino acid sequence of FadL was used to search GenBank for other proteins with amino acid sequence homology. These data demonstrated that FadL and the heat-modifiable outer
membrane protein
P1 of
Haemophilus
influenzae type b were 60.5% conserved and 42.0% identical over 438 amino acid residues.
...
PMID:Primary sequence of the Escherichia coli fadL gene encoding an outer membrane protein required for long-chain fatty acid transport. 198 39
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