Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cytochromes of the a-, b-, c- and d-type become reduced when intact cells of
Hemophilus
parainfluenzae have become anaerobic following respiration with substrates such as formate or succinate, as shown previously (J. Biol. Chem. (1970) 254, 5096-5100). In the presence of formate after depletion of O2, there is an unusual two-step time course of reduction of the
membrane-bound
cytochrome c. The proportion of the cytochrome c which is reduced during the second stage is oxidizable by either nitrate or H2O2 and is reduced again when the nitrate or H2O2 have been depleted. We conclude that the observed two-stage reduction of cytochrome c results from the presence of an oxidant, probably H2O2, produced by reaction of formate dehydrogenase with O2. This was shown by the effects of cyanide, catalase and O2. In addition, no evidence for the production of the oxidant is seen when succinate is the substrate oxidized. Although measurements of absorption spectra indicated only one species of cytochrome c, kinetic evidence is presented for some separation of the cytochrome c into more than one electron transport pathway.
...
PMID:Oxidation and reduction of membrane-bound cytochrome c in Hemophilus parainfluenzae. Reaction with oxygen, hydrogen peroxide and nitrate. 18 42
Chancroid is a sexually transmitted diseased caused by Haemophilus ducreyi. The pathological manifestations of chancroid are unique among
Haemophilus
species and the virulence factors of H. ducreyi that account for these features have not been identified. Some of these virulence factors may be unique components of H. ducreyi, but attempts to identify H. ducreyi-specific components have been unsuccessful. Four polypeptides--A, B, C and D of 83, 77, 56 and 28 kDa, respectively--were identified with a panel of nine H. ducreyi-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). Polypeptide C was one of the five major proteins in H. ducreyi and demonstrated micro-heterogeneity in SDS-PAGE. Polypeptides A, B and D were present in only small amounts in whole-cell lysates of H. ducreyi. The relative amounts of A and B varied, suggesting that they may be precursor molecules. The unique polypeptides C and D were not exposed on the surface. Polypeptide C was highly soluble and did not appear to be
membrane-bound
, whereas polypeptide D appeared to partition with the cytoplasmic membrane and was soluble in Sarkosyl. All four polypeptides appeared to be unique to H. ducreyi since MAbs directed against them did not cross-react with H. influenzae, H. parainfluenzae or Neisseria gonorrhoeae. The mol. wts of all of these polypeptides were conserved throughout 35 clinical isolates collected from 15 cities in eight countries and one reference strain of H. ducreyi that were tested.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Identification of highly conserved and species-specific polypeptides of Haemophilus ducreyi. 128 Dec 34
Haemophilus
influenzae D(-)-lactate dehydrogenase (D(-)-lactate:NAD oxidoreductase; EC 1.1.1.28) was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity using salt fractionation, hydrophobic and dye affinity chromatography. The enzyme was purified 2100-fold with a 14% recovery and a final specific activity of 300 units/mg protein. The enzyme was demonstrated to be a tetramer of Mr 135,000. The enzyme catalyzed the reduction of pyruvate to give exclusively D(-)-lactate using NADH as coenzyme. The reaction catalyzed was essentially unidirectional, with the oxidation of D-lactate in the presence of NAD proceeding at less than 0.2% the rate of pyruvate reduction. Kinetic parameters for the reduction of pyruvate were determined for NADH and four structural analogs of the coenzyme. Coenzyme-competitive inhibition by adenosine derivatives indicated the presence of regions in the coenzyme binding site interacting with the adenosine and pyrophosphate moieties of the coenzyme. The purified enzyme was sensitive to oxidation and was effectively inactivated by sulfhydryl reagents. Conversion of D-lactate to pyruvate catalyzed by a
membrane-bound
D-lactate oxidase was demonstrated in cell-free extracts of H. influenzae.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of Haemophilus influenzae D-lactate dehydrogenase. 230 73
The catabolism of glucose by
Haemophilus
parainfluenzae affected the formation of the primary dehydrogenases of the
membrane-bound
electron transport system. The formation of other components of the respiratory system, 2-demethyl vitamin K(2), cytochrome b(1), cytochrome c(1), and the cytochrome oxidases a(1), a(2), and o, is not affected by the catabolism of glucose. The formation of all components of the electron transport system is controlled by the identity and concentration of the terminal electron acceptors present in the growth medium.
...
PMID:Effect of glucose on the formation of the membrane-bound electron transport system in Haemophilus parainfluenzae. 428 51
The composition of the
membrane-bound
electron transport system of
Haemophilus
parainfluenzae underwent modification in response to the terminal electron acceptor in the growth medium. H. parainfluenzae was able to grow with O(2), nitrate, fumarate, pyruvate, and substrate amounts of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) as electron acceptors. When O(2) served as the electron acceptor and its concentration was lowered below 20 mum, the bacteria formed more cytochromes b, c, a(1), a(2), and o than were present in the cells grown at 150 to 200 mum O(2). Nitrate and nitrite reductase activities also appeared during growth at the low O(2) concentrations in the absence of added nitrate. Cytochrome levels in cells grown anaerobically with fumarate, pyruvate, or NAD as terminal acceptors were similar to those formed in cells grown at low O(2) concentrations. Cells grown with nitrate had higher levels of cytochromes c, b, and o, and of nitrate and nitrite reductases, than did cells grown with the other acceptors. The formation of cytochrome oxidase a(2) was repressed by the presence of nitrate in the growth medium. The critical O(2) concentration (the O(2) concentration at which the rate of O(2) uptake becomes demonstrably dependent on the O(2) concentration) was about 100 mum in cells grown with nitrate and about 15 mum in cells grown with the other acceptors. A mutant of H. parainfluenzae was found to make about 10% as much cytochrome c as the wild type, and its formation of cytochrome a(2) was not repressed by nitrate. The critical O(2) concentration of the mutant was high when it was grown with nitrate, suggesting that the high levels of cytochrome c and the absence of cytochrome a(2) from the wild type are not responsible for the high critical O(2) concentration. The modifications of the respiratory system induced by changing the terminal electron acceptor were inhibited by the presence of chloramphenicol, which suggests that protein synthesis is involved.
...
PMID:Effect of nitrate, fumarate, and oxygen on the formation of the membrane-bound electron transport system of Haemophilus parainfluenzae. 431 51
After a transition from high to low oxygen tension, there was a twofold to 50-fold increase in the content of
membrane-bound
respiratory pigments of
Haemophilus
parainfluenzae, and there were concurrent changes in the metabolism of the membrane phospholipids: (i) a twofold decrease in the rate of turnover of the phosphate in all the phospholipids; (ii) a shift from simple one-phase, linear incorporation of phosphate into phospholipids to a complex biphasic incorporation of phosphate into phospholipids; and (iii) an increase in the total phospholipids with a slight increase in the proportion of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and a slight decrease in the proportion of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). Changes in the rates of incorporation of phosphate into the phospholipids occurred without a change in the rate of bacterial growth. When the compensatory adjustment of the proportions of the respiratory pigments reached a steady state, the total phospholipid, the rate of incorporation of phosphate into phospholipids, and the proportion of PG fell. At steady-state proportions of cytochromes, the proportion of PE and the rate of turnover of the phosphate in the phospholipids increased. All through an incorporation experiment of 1.5 divisions, the specific activity of the phosphate of PG was twice that of phosphatidic acid (PA). The phosphate of PG turned over 1.2 to 1.5 times more rapidly than the phosphate of PA in cells with high and low cytochrome levels. If the PA was an accurate measure of the precursor for the cytidine-5'-diphosphate-diglyceride, which in turn was the precursor of all the lipids, then the results of these experiments suggested that exchange reactions, in addition to synthesis from PA, were involved in phospholipid metabolism. These reactions were more sensitive to changes in oxygen concentration than was the growth rate.
...
PMID:Phospholipid metabolism during changes in the proportions of membrane-bound respiratory pigments in Haemophilus parainfluenzae. 576 29
Spectral analyses with subcellular fractions derived from
Haemophilus
parasuis demonstrated that this organism could synthesize
membrane-bound
and soluble CO- and NO-binding c-type cytochromes in addition to the
membrane-bound
cytochromes d, a1, b, and c; cytochromes d, a1, and o were identified as potential oxidases. The
membrane-bound
and soluble CO- and NO-binding cytochromes c were not spectrally variant cytochromes c, and the redox properties of the soluble cytochrome (reducible by NADH but not by succinate or ascorbate plus N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine) suggested that it, at least, was a low-potential cytochrome; up to 68% of the soluble cytochrome c could be released from the organisms by osmotic-shock treatment, demonstrating its extracytoplasmic location. The cytochrome content of H. parasuis was influenced by both the composition of the growth medium and the phase of growth; it is suggested that the bacterial concentration and growth rate, and therefore the availability of oxygen, regulated cytochrome synthesis.
...
PMID:The cytochrome complement of Haemophilus parasuis. 648 1
Several properties of
Haemophilus
influenzae outer membrane proteins were analyzed to define related proteins in various isolates. H. influenzae type b 760705 had six major outer membrane proteins with the following characteristics. Protein a (Mr, 47,000) demonstrated heat modifiability in sodium dodecyl sulfate; its apparent molecular weight was 34,000 at temperatures below 60 degrees C. This protein was extracted from cell envelopes by using Triton X-100-10 mM MgCl2; in cell envelope preparations, the protein was degraded by trypsin. Proteins b (Mr, 41,000) and c (Mr, 40,000) were insensitive to trypsin degradation, were not heat modifiable in sodium dodecyl sulfate, and were peptidoglycan associated in 0.5% Triton X-100-0.2% sodium dodecyl sulfate. The amount of protein b was reduced in ultrasonically obtained cell envelopes. Protein d (Mr, 37,000) was heat modifiable in sodium dodecyl sulfate with an Mr of 28,000 at temperatures below 100 degrees C and was degraded by trypsin, leaving a
membrane-bound
fragment of Mr, 27,000. Both the intact and degraded proteins were immunologically cross-reactive with the heat-modifiable OmpA protein of Escherichia coli K-12. Protein d was absent in LiCl-EDTA extracts of cells. Protein e (Mr, 30,000), invariably present in all H. influenzae strains tested, was insensitive to trypsin and absent in LiCl-EDTA extracts of cells. Protein k (Mr, 58,000) was extracted from cell envelopes with 2% Triton X-100-10 mM MgCl2 and, in cell envelopes, appeared to be sensitive to trypsin degradation. Proteins with similar properties to those of proteins a to k were found in 10 other H. influenzae b strains, reference strains with serotype a, c, d, e, and f capsules, and 18 of 20 nonencapsulated strains. Their relative molecular weights, however, varied.
...
PMID:Characteristics of major outer membrane proteins of Haemophilus influenzae. 660 58
We examined the events associated with phagocytosis, lysis and digestion of
Haemophilus
influenzae type b (Hib) by subarachnoid leukocytes in infant rats with experimental Hib meningitis. In early stages of infection, large numbers of bacteria were attached to the surfaces of neutrophils and macrophages invaded the subarachnoid space and actively ingested Hib. The bacteria, coccobacillary in shape with an approximate length of 1.0 micrometers and 0.3 micrometer in width, were interiorized after fusion of leukocyte microplicae which had arisen around them. Ingested Hib were sequestered within large,
membrane-bound
vacuoles containing five or more microbes. Following the fusion of primary lysosomes with the membrane of the phagocytic vacuole, bacteria were lysed and degraded. In later stages of infection, macrophages possessed large numbers of inclusions containing extensively digested Hib and myelin figures. Histochemical analysis of subarachnoid leukocytes revealed that macrophages actively synthesized acid phosphatase and that this enzyme aided in the digestion of phagocytosed bacteria. Peroxidase was also demonstrated within phagocytic vacuoles of neutrophils. Our results suggest that subarachnoid macrophages and neutrophils actively lyse and digest ingested Hib through the direct action of their hydrolytic enzymes.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural histopathology of experimental Haemophilus influenzae type B meningitis in the infant rat. II. Phagocytosis and lysis of microorganisms by leptomeningeal leukocytes. 697 44
Expression of the OmpU outer membrane protein of Vibrio cholerae is positively regulated by toxR, which also regulates critical virulence factors such as cholera toxin and the toxin-coregulated pilus colonization factor. In this study, we have characterized the 38-kDa OmpU protein and investigated its role in the adhesion of V. cholerae to mammalian cells. The amino-terminal sequence of OmpU has similarity with the sequences of
Haemophilus
influenzae HMW1 and HMW2 adhesins, which, in turn, also have similarity with the sequence of Bordetella pertussis filamentous hemagglutinin. A monoclonal antibody directed against
FHA
recognized both V. cholerae OmpU and Escherichia coli OmpA, and polyclonal anti-OmpU antibodies recognized
FHA
and E. coli OmpA, suggesting the existence of common epitopes among these proteins. OmpU was strongly recognized by convalescent-phase serum from volunteers experimentally infected with virulent V. cholerae strains, indicating that OmpU is immunogenic and produced in vivo. OmpU selectively bound to fibronectin and to an arginine-glycine-asparagine (RGD) tripeptide but not to other matrix glycoproteins tested such as collagen or laminin. Antibodies directed against OmpU or their F(ab)2 fragments completely inhibited adhesion of several V. cholerae strains to HeLa, HEp-2, Caco-2, and Henle 407 epithelial cells and also inhibited intestinal colonization and conferred protection in newborn mice against both biotypes (El Tor and classical) of V. cholerae O1. Collectively, these data indicate that OmpU has adhesive properties which may play a role in the pathogenesis of cholera.
...
PMID:The OmpU outer membrane protein, a potential adherence factor of Vibrio cholerae. 759 Oct 82
1
2
3
Next >>