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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (Haemophilus)
15,372 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The ability of Haemophilus influenzae, H. parainfluenzae and H. paraphrophilus to utilize iron complexes, iron-proteins and exogenous microbial siderophores was evaluated. In a plate bioassay, all three species used not only ferric nitrate but also the iron chelates ferric citrate, ferric nitrilotriacetate and ferric 2,3-dihydroxybenzoate. Each Haemophilus species examined also used haemin, haemoglobin and haem-albumin as iron sources although only H. influenzae could acquire iron from transferrin or from haemoglobin complexed with haptoglobin. None of the haemophili obtained iron from ferritin or lactoferrin or from the microbial siderophores aerobactin or desferrioxamine B. However, the phenolate siderophore enterobactin supplied iron to both H. parainfluenzae and H. paraphrophilus, and DNA isolated from both organisms hybridized with a DNA probe prepared from the Escherichia coli ferric enterobactin receptor gene fepA. In addition, a monospecific polyclonal antiserum raised against the E. coli 81 kDa ferric enterobactin receptor (FepA) recognized an iron-repressible outer membrane protein (OMP) in H. parainfluenzae of between 80 and 82 kDa (depending on the strain). This anti-FepA serum did not cross-react with any of the OMPs of H. paraphrophilus or H. influenzae. The OMPs of each Haemophilus species were also probed with antisera raised against the 74 kDa Cir or 74 kDa IutA (aerobactin receptor) proteins of E. coli. Apart from one H. parainfluenzae strain (NCTC 10665), in which an OMP of about 80 kDa cross-reacted with the anti-IutA sera, no cross-reactivity was observed between Cir, IutA and the OMPs of H. influenzae, H. parainfluenzae or H. paraphrophilus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Utilization of enterobactin and other exogenous iron sources by Haemophilus influenzae, H. parainfluenzae and H. paraphrophilus. 215 Apr 14

Nine clinical isolates of Haemophilus somnus were screened for their ability to use different transferrins as a source of iron growth. All nine strains were capable of using bovine but not porcine, human or chicken transferrin. A screening assay for siderophore production did not show any evidence of siderophore production by these strains. When iron-deficient cells from these strains were screened for their ability to bind peroxidase-conjugated transferrin, binding was detected with conjugated bovine, but not human or porcine transferrin. Competition binding studies demonstrated that the binding of peroxidase-conjugated bovine transferrin was competitively inhibited by unconjugated bovine transferrin but not transferrin from other species. The induction of receptor expression by low iron conditions was inhibited by chloramphenicol and rifampicin but not ampicillin indicating that new protein and mRNA synthesis was required for expression of receptor activity. Affinity isolation of receptor proteins with biotinylated bovine transferrin, but not human or porcine transferrin, yielded three proteins from H. somnus strain H74. Two of the proteins were identified as 105 kDa and 73 kDa iron-regulated outer membrane proteins. A third protein of 85 kDa that was isolated did not co-migrate with any iron-regulated outer membrane protein. Affinity isolation of receptor proteins from other strains of H. somnus yielded a 73 kDa protein from all strains and a 105 kDa and 85 kDa protein in four of the six strains analysed.
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PMID:Response of Haemophilus somnus to iron limitation: expression and identification of a bovine-specific transferrin receptor. 215 61

Outer membranes from Haemophilus pleuropneumoniae grown under iron-replete and iron-restricted conditions in vitro were analysed by means of SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. Iron restriction resulted in the appearance of two or more novel polypeptides in the molecular size range of 96-102 kD and an increased amount of a 79 kD polypeptide. These polypeptides were recognized by porcine immune sera indicating their production by H. pleuropneumoniae during growth in vivo. Although soluble siderophore production could not be detected, growth of the organisms on an iron-restricted medium was enhanced by the presence of porcine transferrin but not by bovine or human transferrin. The results suggest that H. pleuropneumoniae possesses a specific transferrin receptor, perhaps in the form of an iron-regulated outer membrane protein.
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PMID:Responses of Haemophilus pleuropneumoniae to iron restriction: changes in the outer membrane protein profile and the removal of iron from porcine transferrin. 253 2

Haemophilus influenzae and H. haemolyticus acquired iron bound to human transferrin but not to human lactoferrin, ovo- or porcine transferrins. Conversely the swine pathogens H. pleuropneumoniae and H. parasuis used iron bound only to porcine transferrin. Growth under conditions of iron deprivation induced the production of siderophores and iron-repressible outer membrane proteins in H. parainfluenzae, H. paraphrophilus and H. parasuis but not in H. influenzae, H. haemolyticus or H. pleuropneumoniae. The latter 3 Haemophilus species appear to sequester transferrin bound iron via a siderophore-independent mechanism. However, the ability to produce iron chelating compounds did not enable H. parainfluenzae or H. paraphrophilus to utilize transferrin bound iron.
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PMID:Utilization of transferrin-bound iron by Haemophilus species of human and porcine origins. 253 28

An affinity procedure with purified, biotinylated human transferrin and streptavidin-agarose was used to identify the transferrin-binding proteins in strains of Haemophilus influenzae. Proteins of 58 and 98 Kda were isolated from total membranes prepared from iron-deficient but not iron-sufficient H. influenzae KC548 cells. The 58-Kda protein was capable of binding human transferrin after sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and electroblotting. Isolation of transferrin-binding proteins from type-b and non-typable H. influenzae strains demonstrated some variability in the size of the higher mol. wt protein (94-106 Kda) and in ease of elution of the smaller protein from the affinity resin. Use of purified, biotinylated human lactoferrin in the affinity isolation procedure with membranes from a strain expressing lactoferrin-binding activity resulted in isolation of proteins of 105 and 106 Kda distinct from the transferrin-binding proteins.
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PMID:Identification of the transferrin- and lactoferrin-binding proteins in Haemophilus influenzae. 254 20

We sought to determine whether chloramphenicol would worsen or mitigate the anemia associated with Haemophilus influenzae type b meningitis if administered in doses which produce 'therapeutic' serum concentrations. Seventy-four cases of H. influenzae meningitis were stratified by chloramphenicol cumulative doses (mg/kg body weight) of less than 300 and greater than 300. There was no significant difference in the decrease in blood hemoglobin concentration or in the increase in the FEP:Heme ratio between the two study groups. Plasma iron and transferrin saturation values indicated iron deficiency at days 1 and 5 of hospitalization; by day 10 mean values were within the normal range. These data suggest that H. influenzae type b meningitis, not chloramphenicol therapy in the presence of monitoring is causing the observed anemia.
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PMID:Anemia during Haemophilus influenzae type b meningitis: lack of an effect of chloramphenicol. 276 22

The expression of human transferrin and lactoferrin binding activity in Haemophilus influenzae, detected by a binding assay using human transferrin or lactoferrin conjugated to peroxidase, was regulated by the level of available iron in the medium. Transferrin binding activity was present in all H. influenzae isolates tested but not detected in other Haemophilus species or in species of Pasteurella or Actinobacillus. Lactoferrin binding activity was only detected in 1/15 H. influenzae isolates tested. The transferrin and lactoferrin receptors were shown to be specific for the respective human proteins by means of a competition binding assay. Competition binding assays also showed that iron-loaded transferrin was more effective at blocking the transferrin receptor than apotransferrin, but no differences in receptor blocking were observed between iron-loaded lactoferrin and apolactoferrin.
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PMID:Characterization of the human transferrin and lactoferrin receptors in Haemophilus influenzae. 284 24

The mechanisms for acquisition of iron by Haemophilus influenzae and their role in pathogenesis are not known. Heme and nonheme sources of iron were evaluated for their effect on growth of type b and nontypable strains of H. influenzae in an iron-restricted, defined medium. All 13 strains acquired iron from heme, hemoglobin, hemoglobin-haptoglobin, and heme-hemopexin. Among nonheme sources of protein-bound iron, growth of H. influenzae was enhanced by partially saturated human transferrin but not by lactoferrin or ferritin. Purified ferrienterochelin and ferridesferrioxamine failed to provide iron to H. influenzae, and the supernatants of H. influenzae E1a grown in iron-restricted medium failed to enhance iron-restricted growth of siderophore-dependent strains of Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhimurium, and Arthrobacter terregens. Marked alterations in the profile of outer membrane proteins of H. influenzae were observed when the level of free iron was varied between 1 microM and 1 mM. Catechols were not detected in the supernatants of strain E1a; however, iron-related hydroxamate production was detected by two biochemical assays. We conclude that the sources of iron for H. influenzae are diverse. The significance of hydroxamate production and iron-related outer membrane proteins to H. influenzae iron acquisition is not yet clear.
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PMID:Iron acquisition by Haemophilus influenzae. 296 10

Haemophilus influenzae grown on enriched medium containing protoporphyrin IX rather than hemin was iron starved by the addition of the chelator ethylenediamine di-o-hydroxyphenylacetic acid. Iron starvation could be overcome in each of 33 H. influenzae type b isolates by 30% Fe-saturated human transferrin but not by human lactoferrin. Among nontypeable H. influenzae, 28 of 35 isolates, including 2 of 3 systemic isolates, were able to utilize Fe-transferrin. None of 18 H. parainfluenzae isolates was able to use Fe-transferrin. Iron starvation of H. influenzae type b resulted in increased amounts of three membrane proteins of 94,000 to 98,000 daltons.
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PMID:Haemophilus influenzae can use human transferrin as a sole source for required iron. 387 64

Haemophilus influenzae has the ability to obtain iron from human transferrin via two bacterial cell surface transferrin binding proteins, Tbp1 and Tbp2. Although a wide array of strains have been shown to express these receptor proteins, two studies have recently identified a series of isolates which appeared to lack the ability to bind transferrin. Included in this group were the members of a cryptic genospecies of nontypeable biotype IV strains which appear to possess a tropism for female urogenital tissues and are major etiologic agents of neonatal and postpartum bacteremia due to H. influenzae. The present study employed oligonucleotide primers specific for genes encoding the Tbp proteins of a type b biotype I strain of H. influenzae to probe the genomic DNAs of isolates from the previous studies. The tbpA and tbpB genes which encode Tbp1 and Tbp2, respectively, were detected in all of the strains tested either by PCR amplification directly or by Southern hybridization analysis. All of the strains displayed a transferrin binding phenotype, and affinity isolation of receptor proteins with transferrin-conjugated Sepharose recovered Tbp1 and/or Tbp2 from 11 of 14 strains, including 2 of the nontypeable biotype IV strains. In addition, all of the strains were capable of growing on human transferrin specifically, indicating that the mechanism of iron assimilation from transferrin is functional and is not siderophore mediated. These results confirm the presence of tbp genes in all of the invasive H. influenzae isolates characterized to date, suggesting that Tbp-mediated iron acquisition is important in disease which initiates from either the respiratory or urogenital mucosa.
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PMID:Characterization of transferrin binding proteins 1 and 2 in invasive type b and nontypeable strains of Haemophilus influenzae. 755 84


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