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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (
lipopolysaccharide
)
62,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) on the lymphokine (LK)-dependent activation of murine peritoneal macrophages for intracellular killing of Leishmania enriettii parasites was investigated. Exposure to
LPS
alone did not induce macrophages to kill the parasite. In the presence of LK or recombinant interferon-gamma, however, which by themselves rendered the macrophages only weakly cytotoxic, considerable stimulation of intracellular parasite killing was achieved already at a
LPS
concentration of 1 ng/ml. The response to
LPS
was of the same magnitude in macrophages tested for intracellular killing as in parallel assays of extracellular cytolysis of target cells. Acquisition of leishmanicidal activity by macrophages exposed to LK and
LPS
correlated with stimulation of the respiratory burst, as shown by increased
hexose
monophosphate shunt levels, and priming for elevated chemiluminescence and O2- and H2O2 production. Polymyxin B blocked both this
LPS
-dependent metabolic activity and intracellular parasite destruction. Intracellular killing was, however, not solely dependent on oxidative metabolism of macrophages since in the absence of LK,
LPS
stimulated respiratory burst activity, yet no intracellular killing was observed, and triggering of the respiratory burst by phorbol myristate acetate or zymosan did not affect intracellular parasite survival. These results suggest that, in this experimental model, efficient intracellular parasite killing depends both on increased production of oxygen metabolites and on the availability of so far unidentified factor(s), the synthesis of which requires exposure of macrophages to both LK and
LPS
.
...
PMID:Effect of lipopolysaccharide on intracellular killing of Leishmania enriettii and correlation with macrophage oxidative metabolism. 303 Jul 68
Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from Gram-negative bacteria are considered to be the responsible agents for the induction of endotoxic shock, affecting the liver as a target organ. In this study, the cell morphology and some biochemical properties of 24 h-culture-hepatocyte monolayers treated with Escherichia coli 0111:B4
lipopolysaccharide
, were observed. Cell morphology was observed by scanning electron microscopy and immunofluorescence methods. LPS interaction induced an increase in rounded cells with diminished adhesion capacity. As biochemical parameters, albumin synthesis and 2-deoxyglucose uptake were measured. LPS decreased the
hexose
uptake in a dose-dependent manner. Binding of (14C)LPS to cultured hepatocytes showed that LPS binds to non-specific constituents of the membrane bilayer.
...
PMID:Morphological damage induced by Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide in cultured hepatocytes: localization and binding properties. 305 62
The structure of the
hexose
region of the
lipopolysaccharide
from M206 strain, a mutant of Salmonella typhimurium having reduced virulence, was partially determined. Immunological tests indicated cross-reactions of anti-(M206) antiserum with wild-type C5 and Ra mutant strains. Data obtained on chemical composition, periodate oxidation, acetolysis, methylation and analysis by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry show that M206 type
lipopolysaccharide
contains the common core polysaccharide of Salmonella which was substituted in position 4 of the subterminal glucose unit by a disaccharide: D-glucosyl 1----3 D-galactose. This substitution is probably related to the slight virulence of M206 strain.
...
PMID:Studies on the hexose region of the lipopolysaccharide from a low virulence strain of Salmonella typhimurium. 307 40
Female B6C3F1 mice were exposed to graded doses of nickel sulfate to determine a threshold response for myelotoxicity and immunotoxicity, and to identify which of the populations of lymphoreticular cells were most sensitive to the toxic effects of nickel. Animals were given free access to the chemical in the drinking water at 0, 1, 5, or 10 g/l for 180 d. Water consumption, blood and tissue nickel concentrations, body and organ weights, histopathology, immune responses, bone marrow cellularity and proliferation, and cellular enzyme activities were evaluated. There was no mortality. Mice in the 5-g/l and 10-g/l dose groups drank less water than controls; the responses measured in the 10-g/l group may have been due to a combination of dehydration and chemical toxicity. Decreases in body and organ weights were confined to mice in the 10-g/l dose group, except for the dose-related reductions in thymus weights. Blood nickel was measured at 4, 8, 16, and 23 wk of exposure. The mean blood nickel values showed increases between 4 and 8 wk that were proportional to time and dose; thereafter there was no substantial increase in blood nickel in any of the dose groups, except for an increase in the mean blood concentration in the 10-g/l group at 23 wk. The kidney was the major organ of nickel accumulation. The primary toxic effects of nickel sulfate were expressed in the myeloid system. There were dose-related decreases in bone marrow cellularity, and in granulocyte-macrophage and pluripotent stem-cell proliferative responses. In unfractionated bone marrow cells glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme activity from the
hexose
monophosphate shunt was more sensitive to nickel sulfate than were representative glycolytic or Krebs cycle enzymes, with 25-35% maximum inhibition at 5 g/l and 10 g/l. Aliquots of bone marrow cells were separated into enriched bands of lymphocytes, granulocyte-macrophages, and erythrocytes; enzyme inhibition that occurred in unfractionated bone marrow cell aliquots was only expressed after cell separation in the enriched granulocyte-macrophage cell population, suggesting that these committed stem cells were a primary target of nickel sulfate toxicity. There was one example of systemic immunotoxicity, reduction in the lymphoproliferative response to
lipopolysaccharide
, and it was regarded as secondary to the primary effect of nickel sulfate on the myeloid system, since this was the only significant change among a panel of seven immune parameters that were evaluated.
...
PMID:Evaluation of tissue disposition, myelopoietic, and immunologic responses in mice after long-term exposure to nickel sulfate in the drinking water. 339 77
When stimulated in vitro with macrophage-activating factor or
lipopolysaccharide
, mouse peritoneal macrophages acquire the capacity to develop a strong respiratory burst when they are triggered by membrane-active agents. The presence of intracellular parasites of the genus Leishmania (L. enriettii, L. major) significantly inhibited such activity, as measured by chemiluminescence, reduction of cytochrome c and Nitro Blue Tetrazolium, and
hexose
monophosphate shunt levels. On the contrary, inert intracellular particles such as latex beads strongly increased the macrophage respiratory burst, suggesting that the Leishmania-linked inhibition resulted from a specific parasite effect. Impairment of macrophage oxidative metabolism by intracellular Leishmania spp. was a function of the number of infecting microorganisms and was more pronounced in macrophages infected with living than with dead parasites. Moreover, the metabolic inhibition was less apparent in L. enriettii-infected macrophages that were exposed to both macrophage-activating factor and
lipopolysaccharide
, i.e., conditions leading to complete parasite destruction. The mechanisms of respiratory burst inhibition by intracellular Leishmania spp. are unclear, but these observations suggest that such effects may contribute significantly to intracellular survival of the microorganisms.
...
PMID:Impairment of the oxidative metabolism of mouse peritoneal macrophages by intracellular Leishmania spp. 354 31
Previous work from this laboratory has demonstrated the persistence of Bacteroides intermedius in the livers of mice receiving an intraperitoneal inoculum of B. intermedius and Fusobacterium necrophorum. This study was undertaken to determine whether F. necrophorum enhanced the in vitro growth of B. intermedius. Tryptose phosphate broth did not support the growth of B. intermedius alone, but the bacterium did survive in a tryptose phosphate broth culture of F. necrophorum. B. intermedius cultured in F. necrophorum-conditioned tryptose phosphate broth grew impressively, reaching maximal absorbance at 24 h after inoculation. The growth of B. intermedius in F. necrophorum-conditioned tryptose phosphate broth was proportional to the amount of conditioned medium present. The B. intermedius growth-stimulating factor was detectable in conditioned medium 8 h after inoculation with F. necrophorum and could be detected throughout the 96-h incubation period. Growth-factor-active fractions eluted from a Sephadex G-100 column did not absorb at 280 nm and were retained on the column until 4 column volumes were eluted. The growth factor was nondialyzable and stable to boiling, lyophilization, extraction with hot aqueous phenol, and trypsin digestion. The factor was inactivated by exposure to pH 2.0 in the pepsin digestion protocol. Significant amounts of
hexose
, methyl pentose, and 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate were detected in pooled growth-factor-active fractions eluted from the Sephadex column. This pool was also active in the Limulus lysate endotoxin assay. These results suggest that the B. intermedius growth-stimulating factor produced by F. necrophorum is a
lipopolysaccharide
.
...
PMID:Enhancement of Bacteroides intermedius growth by Fusobacterium necrophorum. 370 Jun 5
Capsular structure and biochemical composition varied between two isolates (virulent and avirulent) of Haemophilus pleuropneumoniae serotype 5. The presence of capsule was determined by transmission electron microscopy with glutaraldehyde-osmium, ruthenium red, alcian blue, and phosphotungstic acid staining procedures. The virulent isolate of H. pleuropneumoniae had a distinct, adherent capsule. The avirulent isolate had a fragile, easily removed capsule. Capsular material (CM) and a
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) were isolated from each bacterial isolate and were compared biochemically and biologically. CM from both isolates contained carbohydrates, no detectable protein, and no detectable to trace amounts of lipid A. Each
LPS
contained heptose,
hexose
, galactose, glucosamine, 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate, and lipid A. Biological responses to CM and
LPS
from both isolates were demonstrated in the proclotting enzyme of Limulus polyphemus amebocyte lysate activation and in serological cross-reactions by immunofluorescence and immunodiffusion precipitation. The virulent isolate contained approximately 10 mg of
LPS
per g more on an original dry weight basis than the avirulent isolate.
LPS
from the virulent isolate contained approximately 13 times more galactose than
LPS
from the avirulent isolate. The differences of capsular structure and biochemical composition may contribute to the role of CM in porcine H. pleuropneumoniae infections.
...
PMID:Morphological and biochemical comparison of virulent and avirulent isolates of Haemophilus pleuropneumoniae serotype 5. 394 95
Mild acid hydrolysis with 1% acetic acid (100 degrees C, 15-60 min) of
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) isolated from Coxiella burnetii phase I cells leads to a drastic decrease in its serological reactivity as shown by the passive hemolysis test. This decrease in reactivity occurs parallel or even prior to the cleavage of
LPS
into free lipid A and the polysaccharide moiety. During this mild hydrolysis two unusual sugars (X and Y) are released from the
LPS
, which were obtained in pure state by thin-layer chromatography. Analysis of their alditol acetate derivatives by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry revealed that sugar X is a 6-deoxy-3-C-methyl-
hexose
and sugar Y a 3-C-(hydroxymethyl)-pentose. Using a range of authentic standards and different thin-layer and gas chromatographic conditions, X could be recognized as 6-deoxy-3-C-methyl-gulose (virenose), very probably as the L form of this sugar (L-virenose). Y has been identified as 3-C-(hydroxymethyl)-lyxose (dihydrohydroxystreptose) by comparing it with newly synthesized 3-C-(hydroxymethyl)-pentoses (Dahlman, O., Garegg, P. J., Mayer, H., Schramek, S., unpublished results). Both branched sugars are (at least partially) in terminal positions since methylation analysis of
LPS
afforded (mainly) their permethylated derivatives. This analysis further showed virenose to be linked in C. burnetii phase I
LPS
as pyranose and dihydro-hydroxystreptose as furanose. The terminal linkage and the chemical nature of X and Y are in accordance with the observed acid-lability of the serological determinants.
...
PMID:3-C-branched aldoses in lipopolysaccharide of phase I Coxiella burnetii and their role as immunodominant factors. 399 91
The "T1 side chain" portion of cell wall
lipopolysaccharide
from T1 strains of Salmonella contains d-galactofuranose and d-ribofuranose residues. Isotope labeling studies, using intact cells of mutants each blocked at either of the two different steps of d-galactose metabolism (uridine diphosphate-glucose 4-epimerase and galactose-1-P uridylyl transferase) or at phosphoglucoisomerase, led to the following conclusions. (i) d-Galactofuranose residues are synthesized from d-galactopyranose or its derivatives, rather than by a direct conversion from other hexopyranoses or their derivatives. (ii) The pyranose-to-furanose conversion does not appear to take place at the level of the free d-galactose or d-galactose 1-phosphate. This result suggests that the conversion may occur at the stage of uridine diphosphate-d-galactose. (iii) In a mutant lacking phosphoglucoisomerase, d-ribofuranose residues in T1 side chains contained (14)C derived from exogenous d-fructose-U-(14)C, but little (3)H from exogenous d-glucose-1-(3)H. Thus, no evidence was found for a direct pathway of aldohexose-to-ribose conversion involving a loss of one of the carbons in the C2-C6 moiety of aldohexoses. This suggests, but does not prove, that the T1 ribofuranose residues are synthesized by conventional mechanisms involving
hexose
monophosphate shunt and transketolase-transaldolase reactions.
...
PMID:Biosynthesis of T1 antigen in Salmonella: origin of D-galactofuranose and D-ribofuranose residues. 492 77
Killed Coxiella burnetii (C.b.) cells in phase II but not in phase I had a mild stimulatory effect on
hexose
monophosphate shunt (HMPS) and superoxide anion production by human polymorphonuclear (PMN) leukocytes. Preincubation of C.b. cells of either phase with serum of a leukocyte donor lacking detectable antibodies to C.b. did not affect the studied activities of PMN leukocytes. In contrast, both HMPS stimulation and superoxide production were enhanced by specific opsonization of C.b. cells with rabbit immune sera containing corresponding phase I and/or phase II antibodies. Stimulatory effect was observed also with
lipopolysaccharide
-protein-phospholipid (LPS-Pr-Pl) complex but not with
lipopolysaccharide
-protein (LPS-Pr) complex and with purified
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) isolated from phase I C.b. cells. Possible consequences of these findings for explanation of C.b. resistance to intracellular killing by professional phagocytes are discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of Coxiella burnetii on the stimulation of hexose monophosphate shunt and on superoxide anion production in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 614 2
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