Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (lipopolysaccharide)
62,215 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We describe here the isolation, purification, and structural characterization of a lipid A precursor synthesized under nonpermissive conditions by a mutant of Salmonella typhimurium conditionally defective in the synthesis of the 3-deoxy-D-mannoctulosonate (2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate, KDO) region of the lipopolysaccharide. The precursor was isolated free from lipopolysaccharide, murein, and phospholipids by extraction of delipidated cells with 90% phenol/CHCL3/petroleum ether. The molecule was recovered from the phenol phase after precipitation of lipopolysaccharide with H2O and subsequently purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Structural analyses showed that the lipid A precursor is a phosphorylated glucosamine disaccharide containing one ester and two amide-linked residues of beta-hydroxymyristate. In contrast to lipid A, the precursor disaccharide lacks ester-linked 12:0 and 14:0 fatty acids as well as KDO. The molecule contains 2 phosphate residues both of which were identified as phosphomonoesters by 31P NMR spectroscopy. One of the phosphomonoesters is located in position 1 of the reducing terminal glucosamine residue; the location of the other phosphomonoester was not determined. The structure of the precursor provides strong support for the conclusion that KDO incorporation occurs at an early stage in lipid A biosynthesis prior to the incorporation of ester-linked saturated fatty acids.
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PMID:Lipid A mutants of Salmonella typhimurium. Purification and characterization of a lipid A precursor produced by a mutant in 3-deoxy-D-mannooctulosonate-8-phosphate synthetase. 1 8

Extracts of specific granules and azurophil granules from human neutrophils were tested for their bactericidal activity against various lipopolysaccharide mutants of Salmonella typhimurium LT-2. Three purified granule populations, one specific and two azurophil, were obtained by isopycnic centrifugation of homogenized neutrophils. Each was extracted with 0.2 M acetate buffer (pH 4), and the extracts were dialyzed against phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7) to remove acetate. These extracts contained >/=84% of the lysozyme, lactoferrin, or myeloperoxidase initially present in the whole granules. The S. typhimurium mutants possessed Ra, Rc, Rd(1), Rd(2), or Re lipopolysaccharide. As the carbohydrate content of the lipopolysaccharide decreased, the bacteria became increasingly more susceptible to the bactericidal activity of all granule extracts. Bactericidal activity of the extracts was in the order: mixed (azurophil + specific) >/= azurophil >> specific. Specific granules were bacteriostatic for S through Rd(2) bacteria. They were bactericidal only for the Re mutant. Both azurophil granule populations were equally bactericidal. Extracts boiled for 30 min retained none of their bactericidal activity for any of the bacteria; however, they remained bacteriostatic for the deep rough (Rd(2), Re) mutants. Bactericidal activity was dependent upon pH, in that mixed and azurophil granule contents killed the smooth parent and Ra mutant best at pH 5, the Rc and Rd(1) mutants to the same degree at pH 5 to 8, and the deep rough mutants (Rd(2) and Re) best at pH 8. Specific granule contents were most bacteriostatic for S through Rd(2) bacteria at pH 5 and killed the Re mutant only at pH 8. Thus, as the S. typhimurium lipopolysaccharide content decreased, the bactericidal pH optimum increased. Killing by all extracts was dependent upon incubation temperature, with almost no bactericidal or bacteriostatic activity observed when bacteria and granule fractions were incubated on ice (2 degrees C) and plated immediately. Intermediate killing was observed at 22 degrees C. If bacteria were incubated with granule extracts at 2 degrees C, washed free of extract, suspended in medium without extract, and reincubated at 37 degrees C, killing was observed. This suggested that a component(s) of the extracts was sticking to the bacteria at 2 degrees C but killing only at 37 degrees C.
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PMID:Bactericidal activity of specific and azurophil granules from human neutrophils: studies with outer-membrane mutants of Salmonella typhimurium LT-2. 2

An alkaline phosphatase mutant of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exhibiting both regulatory and catalytic changes was isolated. Under repression conditions (i.e. high inorganic phosphate (Pi)) the mutant culture produced an alkaline phosphatase (APase) displaying significant activity against both beta-glycerol phosphate (betaGP) and p-nitrophenyl phosphate (pNPP), while the wild type displayed no activity directed towards these substrates under the same conditions. In vivo, the mutant enzyme's ratio of specific activities was 45:1 in favour of betaGP versus pNPP, whereas this ratio was reversed to 1:9 betaGP versus pNPP for the same enzyme isolated from mutant cells. In addition, the kinetic parameters and stability requirements for the mutant-derived enzyme was altered in comparison with those of the wild type. A study of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) preparations from both the mutant and wild type indicated the mutant to be deficient in the core region of its LPS. The authors propose that the modifications in the catalytic activity of the mutant enzyme, demonstrated in vivo, are due to a change in the enzyme's microenvironment.
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PMID:An alkaline phosphatase mutant of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 1. Effects of regulatory, structural, and environmental shifts on enzyme function. 2 29

Pili from Bacteroides nodosus were purified to greater than 99% homogeneity by precipitation at pH 4.0 and in MgCl2 followed by chromatography on BioGel A150. The pili were composed entirely of one type of polypeptide subunit, pilin. No carbohydrates, nucleic acid, lipid, lipopolysaccharide or phosphate could be detected in purified pili preparations. The molecular weight of pilin from B. nodosus strains 91B and 198 was 18,400 and from strain 80 was 19,300. The isoelectric points of pili from B. nodosus strains 91B and 80 were both 4.5. The buoyant densities of pili from strains 91B, 80 and 198 were 1.287, 1.284 and 1.286 g ml-1, respectively. The three strains of B. nodosus did not cross-react in K-agglutination tests and produced pili which did not cross-react in immunodiffusion tests. Antiserum to highly purified pili caused a characteristic K-type agglutination reaction. It was concluded that pili are the K-agglutinogen.
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PMID:Purification of pili from Bacteroides nodosus and an examination of their chemical, physical and serological properties. 4 54

Lipid A isolated from lipopolysaccharide of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis was used for immunization of rabbits to afford antisera to lipid A with titers of 1:640 in the passive hemolysis test. Exhaustion of immune serume with sheep erythrocytes decreased antibody titers up to 1:160. Authentic samples of 2-(DL-3-hydroxytetradecanoyl)amino-2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate, 2-tetradecanoylamino-2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate and 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate have been synthesized in order to carry out a comparative study of inhibitory activity of these compounds and lipid A using a system of lipid A and antiserum to lipid A. As a result, the immunodominant moiety of the lipid A of Y. pseudotuberculosis proved to contain a D-glucosamine residue acylated with 3-hydroxytetradecanoic acid at the amino group. The nature of the fatty acid acylating the amino group of glucosamine does not play an important role in the structure of immunodominant moiety of lipid A.
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PMID:Structural studies on the immunodominant group of lipid A from lipopolysaccharide of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. 8 32

A procedure is described for isolating a high-molecular-weight polysaccharide (PS) from the slime of Pseudomonas aeruginosa immunotype 1. The resultant material, obtained from the void volume of a Sephadex G-100 column, was composed of carbohydrate and water. No lipopolysaccharide (LPS), 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonoate, heptose, phosphate, or protein was detectable, and nucleic acid contamination was generally below 1%. The carbohydrate composition of the PS was glucose, rhamnose, galactose, arabinose, and mannose. PS had a molecular weight of between 100,000 and 350,000 and did not disaggregate when chromatographed in the presence of sodium deoxycholate. An antigen immunologically indistinguishable from PS could be obtained from LPS by either acetic acid hydrolysis and column chromatography or by allowing solutions of LPS to stand at room temperature for 3 days. Some of this LPS-associated polysaccharide eluted as the void volume of a G-100 column but differed from PS by its lack of galactose and arabinose. LPS also contained an immunodeterminant not shared with PS that was detected by its stability to dilute alkali treatment (0.1 N NaOH, 37 degrees C, 2 h). PS was destroyed by alkali treatment. PS appeared to represent a form of LPS polysaccharide side chain that contains galactose and arabinose and is of a high molecular weight.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of a high-molecular-weight polysaccharide from the slime of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 10 40

The chemical composition of the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of the smooth strain Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO 307 and a spontaneously derived rough mutant, obtained by selection for resistance to the LPS-specific phage E79, are compared. The rough LPS was shown to contain lipid A, heptose, 2-keto 3-deoxyoctonic acid, galactosamine, alanine and phosphate but lacked glucose, rhamnose and fucosamine which were important constituents, on a weight basis, of the smooth LPS. These results, and chromatographic analysis of the polysaccharide fraction indicate that the rough strain lacked side chain material and was defective in its inner core region. The chemical date obtained were consistent with a core in the PAO strain similar to that of strain NCTC 1999, enhancing the evidence for a common core polysaccharide in the LPS of P. aeruginosa strains.
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PMID:The chemical composition of the lipopolysaccharide from Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PAO and a spontaneously derived rough mutant. 10 26

An antigen (ZAB) common to Neisseria gonorrhoeae was prepared by stepwise elution of a crude gonococcal antigen (ZA) from columns of diethylaminoethyl cellulose employing 0.02 M phosphate buffers, pH 7.6, containing increasing concentrations of sodium chloride. Rats immunized with ZAB produced reaginic (IgE) antibody which cross-reacted with ZA prepared from eight gonococcal strains by the passive cutaneous anaphylaxis (PCA) test. Heating of the sera at 56 degrees C for 4 h destroyed the PCA activity. The PCA activity of the anti-ZAB rat serum was removed after absorption with ZAB antigen or with rabbit anti-rat IgE but not after absorption with gonococcal lipopolysaccharide or with heat-killed or formalinized gonococci. Treatment of ZAB with trypsin or heating at 100 degrees C for 30 min destroyed or reduced the antigenic activity respectively. Further purification of ZAB by filtration through Sephadex G-100 gave a preparation (ZAB2) which contained the common antigen as shown by the cross-reactivity of anti-ZAB2 rat serum with seven stains of N. gonorrhoeae. Fraction ZAB2 contained material which had a molecular weight less than 13,700 and was associated with the presence of material absorbing at 260 nm. The results of this study indicate that a low molecular weight antigen, which appears to be protein in nature and associated with nuclei acid, is common to the gonococcus and is the main antigenic component inducing reaginic (IgE) antibody in the rat.
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PMID:Induction of reaginic (IgE) gonococcal antibodies in the rat by a common antigen of Neisseria gonorrhoeae. 10 9

Antiserum to a purified type R lipopolysaccharide antigen isolated from Neisseria gonorrhoeae was used in a slide agglutination test and compared with conventional carbohydrate utilization and fluorescent antibody tests to confirm the identity of laboratory cultures classified as typical or "atypical" N. gonorrhoeae. Cultures of Corynebacterium vaginalis, N. meningitidis, N. catarrhalis, N. sicca, and N. lactamicus were also tested in the slide agglutination procedure. The addition of both deoxyribonuclease and ribonuclease (1 mg/ml) to the cell suspension medium of phosphate-buffered saline improved the sensitivity and specificity of the agglutination reaction for N. gonorrhoeae. Problems relating to the agglutination test as an aid in identification of N. gonorrhoeae are discussed.
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PMID:Nuclease enhancement of specific cell agglutination in a serodiagnostic test for Neisseria gonorrhoeae. 11 Aug 30

1. Protein extracts obtained from Salmonella minnesota Re mutant cells by treatment with EDTA/NaC1 solution contain a protein which exhibits high affinity to bacterial lipopolysaccharides. The isolation and partial characterization of this lipopolysaccharide-binding protein is described. 2. The protein was purified from EDTA extracts by a two-step procedure consisting of ion-exchange chromatography on CM-Sephadex and preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 9.5. The yield of the total purification procedure was around 16%. 3. The resulting protein preparation was homogeneous on the basis of disc gel electrophoresis, dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis, isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide gel and immunoelectrophoresis. 4. The isoelectric point of the protein was found to be 10.3 at 4 degrees C. Its molecular weight determined by dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis is 15000. Its amino acid composition is characterized by the absence of histidine and proline, a low content in tyrosine and high amounts of alanine, lysine, aspartic and glutamic acid residues, or their respective amides. 5. The lipopolysaccharide-protein association was shown to be mainly due to ionic interactions of the basic protein with negatively charged groups (probably phosphate and pyrophosphate groups) of the lipid A moiety. 6. Purified lipopolysaccharide-binding protein is immunogenic in rabbits, thus enabling the preparation of specific antiserum. 7. The protein is located at the surface of Salmonella minnesota Re mutant cells as revealed by antiserum absorption with total bacteria. Ferritin-labelling studies further demonstrated that it is evenly spread over the entire cell surface. 8. Comparative antiserum absorption studies using smooth and rough strains of Salmonella minnesota, Salmonella typhimurium, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella and Shigella revealed the presence of lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (or a serologically cross-reacting antigen) in most of the strains tested. From these results the protein can be considered as a common antigen of Enterobacteriaceae.
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PMID:A lipopolysaccharide-binding cell-surface protein from Salmonella minnesota. Isolation, partial characterization and occurrence in different Enterobacteriaceae. 11 33


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