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

The effect of H. pylori lipopolysaccharide on the synthesis and secretion of sulfated mucus glycoprotein in gastric mucosa was investigated. The lipopolysaccharide, while showing no discernible effect on the apomucin synthesis, exerted a profound inhibitory effect on the process of mucus glycoprotein glycosylation and sulfation, and evoked a rapid (within 15 min) inhibition (65%) in both mucin glycosylation and sulfation at its optimal concentration of 100 micrograms/ml. The data on mucin secretory responses indicated that the added lipopolysaccharide caused a 57% stimulation in sulfated mucin secretion within 15 min followed thereafter by inhibition, which reached a maximum of 32% by 45 min. The high molecular weight mucin form predominated in the initial secretion, while prolonged exposure to the lipopolysaccharide caused a significant increase in the low molecular weight mucin form. The results suggest that H. pylori lipopolysaccharide exerts detrimental effect on mucus glycoprotein sulfation and assembly.
...
PMID:Effect of Helicobacter pylori lipopolysaccharide on the synthesis of sulfated gastric mucin. 141 2

The effect of H. pylori lipopolysaccharide on the synthesis and secretion of sulfated mucin in gastric mucosa was investigated using mucosal segments incubated in the presence of [3H]proline, [3H]glucosamine and [35S]Na2SO4. The lipopolysaccharide, while showing no discernible effect on the apomucin synthesis was found to inhibit the process of mucin glycosylation and sulfation, which at 100 micrograms/ml lipopolysaccharide reached the optimal inhibition of 65%. The analysis of mucin secretory responses revealed that the lipopolysaccharide by first 15 min caused a 57% stimulation in sulfomucin secretion followed thereafter by inhibition, which reached maximum of 32% by 45 min. The results suggest that colonization of gastric mucosa by H. pylori may be detrimental to the process of gastric sulfomucin synthesis and secretion.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori lipopolysaccharide effect on the synthesis and secretion of gastric sulfomucin. 159 Aug 1

Elevated systemic levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) have been directly correlated with increased mortality during experimental gram-negative bacterial sepsis. Although monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) directed against gram-negative bacterial lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin, LPS) decrease TNF production in vitro and enhance survival in vivo, the precise relationship between inhibition of TNF secretion and protective capacity has not been defined. We hypothesized that protective anti-LPS mAbs inhibited LPS-stimulated TNF production. To test this hypothesis, we first produced and characterized three anti-LPS mAbs. We then examined the ability of these mAbs to decrease TNF secretion in an in vitro assay using cells from the murine macrophage cell line RAW 264.7. Subsequently, we assessed the protective capacities of these anti-LPS mAbs in a murine mucin peritonitis model of sepsis using live Escherichia coli 0111:B4 bacterial challenge. Our results demonstrated that those anti-LPS mAbs that decreased LPS-stimulated TNF secretion in vitro were protective in vivo. We concluded that inhibition of TNF secretion in vitro reflected protective capacity and that anti-LPS mAbs may confer protection via abrogation of macrophage TNF secretion. Inhibition of TNF production in vitro may provide a valuable test that may facilitate the selection of protective anti-LPS mAbs.
...
PMID:Protective anti-lipopolysaccharide monoclonal antibodies inhibit tumor necrosis factor production. 159 69

The protective activity of the sera of mice immunized with the preparations of native and detoxified N. meningitidis lipopolysaccharide (LPS), group A, as well as with monoclonal antibodies to N. meningitidis antigens, groups A and B, was studied on the mucin model of meningococcal infection. The study showed that the maximum level of anti-LPS antibodies in mice was observed on day 7 after the injection of LPS. Immune sera obtained from mice were capable of protecting the animals from fetal meningococcemia induced by N. meningitidis strains of homologous and heterologous groups. As shown by the results of this study, the alkaline treatment of N. meningitidis native LPS did not decrease the protective properties of antibodies. The monoclonal antibodies under study were found to possess high preventive activity in mice challenged with N. meningitidis, groups A and B. Anti-LPS monoclonal antibodies showed greater protective activity than antipolysaccharide monoclonal antibodies.
...
PMID:[The protective activity of polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to the lipopolysaccharide of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A in in vivo experiments]. 212 1

A lectin with strong hemagglutinating activity toward erythrocytes of several animal species was isolated from an 18-h culture supernatant of a diarrheagenic strain, V2, of non-O1 Vibrio cholerae. The hemagglutinin (HA) was purified free of lipopolysaccharide by salt fractionation followed by gel filtration, hydrophobic interaction chromatography, and, finally, gel filtration in the presence of urea and deoxycholate. The purification procedure resulted in an HA preparation with 80-fold enhancement of specific activity. The HA consisted of noncovalently bound subunits of Mr 62,000 and behaved essentially as a single component with pI 6.0. Nonpolar and acidic amino acids contributed 46 and 24%, respectively, to the total amino acid residues. Electron micrographs of the HA showed it to consist of large, nonstoichiometric aggregates' of disklike molecules of 10-nm diameter. Inhibition of the HA by the glycoproteins fetuin, asialofetuin, and mucin, but not by ovalbumin and simple sugars, suggested the specific requirement of complex carbohydrates for binding. Rabbit antisera to the purified HA inhibited the hemagglutinating activities of the crude cell-free HA preparations, but not cell-associated HA activities of the parent (V2) or of other O1 and non-O1 V. cholerae strains. This suggested that the released and cell-associated HA activities were mediated by antigenically distinct components. Immunoblotting experiments showed that the antisera recognized a polypeptide component of Mr 62,000 in the cell envelope preparations of the parent and several other V. cholerae O1 and non-O1 strains. These data suggested that the HA was a nonfimbrial lectin of somatic origin with no protease activity and was apparently distinct from V. cholerae HAs described so far.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a novel hemagglutinin from Vibrio cholerae. 222 40

The current studies were undertaken to assess the ability of the outer membrane proteins (OMPs) of Salmonella typhi to induce protection against challenge with the bacteria in mucin. OMPs were isolated as described by Schnaitman (J. Bacteriol. 108:553-556, 1971) and were found to be contaminated with approximately 4% lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Immunization with as little as 30 micrograms of OMPs conferred 100% protection to mice challenged with up to 1,000 50% lethal doses (LD50) of two strains of S. typhi (9,12,d, Vi and Ty2). In addition, 30% protection against challenge with up to 500 LD50 of Salmonella typhimurium was achieved. Immunization with LPS at doses equivalent to those found in the OMPs was considerably inferior to the OMPs in the induction of an immune status. Moreover, LPS was effective only when the challenge was performed with S. typhi 9,12,d, Vi (40% protection to 100 LD50). An antiserum raised in rabbits reacted mainly against the bands of the molecular weights corresponding to the so-called porins contained in the OMP preparation as shown by Western blotting (immunoblotting). This rabbit antiserum protected 100% of mice against challenge with 100 LD50 of either strain of S. typhi and 80% of mice against challenge with the same LD50 of S. typhimurium. These results indicate the usefulness of OMPs in the induction of active immunity against S. typhi in mice.
...
PMID:Protection against Salmonella typhi infection in mice after immunization with outer membrane proteins isolated from Salmonella typhi 9,12,d, Vi. 284 76

An antiserum with a high content of antibodies, binding to the Gram-negative lipopolysaccharide core region, was prepared by immunizing rabbits with the rough Escherichia coli mutant J5. This antiserum was capable of protecting mice against lethal challenge doses of E. coli 0 111:B4 in a mouse model where the animals were compromised by means of mucin plus hemoglobin (LD 50 = 10(3) bacteria). However, no protection was observed in a non-compromised mouse model (LD 50 = 10(7) bacteria). This observation might explain why in the past so many discrepant results have been obtained in mouse protection studies with cross-reactive antisera.
...
PMID:Use of mucin and hemoglobin in experimental murine gram-negative bacteremia enhances the immunoprotective action of antibodies reactive with the lipopolysaccharide core region. 354 72

The effects of intra-articular injection of small amounts of E. coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) into the intercarpal joint of 5 ponies were studied. The LPS induced predictable changes all of which were analogous to acute bacterial infection, except that the development of signs occurred sooner after the LPS injection, and subsided within 36 hours. Fever was monophasic and peaked at 5-7 hours. The ponies exhibited depression, reduced or absent appetite, increased pulse and respiration rates, and lameness. The lameness became evident between 1 and 2 hours after injection, at which time warmth, articular effusion, and resentment to palpation of joint flexion were evident. Hematological changes included neutrophilic leucocytosis, and changes in copper, iron and zinc serum concentrations. The synovial fluid total protein, leucocyte, and alkaline phosphatase levels increased within 2 hours. The mucin precipitation, total protein and leucocyte counts in synovial fluid remained elevated long after clinical and hematological changes had subsided. The model is useful for the study of some aspects of infectious joint disease.
...
PMID:An induced synovitis disease model in ponies. 355 39

Exohemagglutinin was found in the culture medium of Bacteroides gingivalis 381. Exohemagglutinin was purified 3,150-fold from culture fluid by ultracentrifugation followed by gel filtration on Sepharose CL-4B and by affinity chromatography on arginine-agarose. Examination of the final preparation of exohemagglutinin by biochemical analysis and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that the isolated exohemagglutinin contained three major proteins but not a detectable lipopolysaccharide. Hemagglutination inhibition experiments showed that the activity of exohemagglutinin was inhibited by L-arginine and the arginine-containing peptides, although the activity was unaffected by the sugars tested. Some protein and glycoproteins that were examined also exhibited the inhibitory activity. When the bovine submaxillary mucin was chemically modified by beta-elimination and bovine serum albumin was modified by guanidination, the inhibitory effects on hemagglutination were significantly enhanced. These results suggest that the hemagglutination of the isolated exohemagglutinin may be involved in arginine residues as components of ligand-binding sites on erythrocytes.
...
PMID:Isolation and some properties of exohemagglutinin from the culture medium of Bacteroides gingivalis 381. 369 90

It was investigated whether or not the human blood group isoantibodies A and B could be induced by immunogenic stimuli via natural routes with a kind of antigenic substance to which all humans are commonly exposed, or if the appearance of these antibodies is independent of antigenic stimuli as has long been believed. Escherichia coli O(86), which possess high human blood group B and faint A activity in vitro, were fed to healthy humans and those with intestinal disorders. 80% of the sick individuals of blood group O and A responded with a significant rise of anti-B antibodies which was frequently de novo in infants; significant increase of anti-A isoantibodies among blood group O individuals was less frequent. Over one-third of the healthy individuals also had a significant isoantibody increase. Intestinal lesions favor isoantibody stimulation by intestinal bacteria; this view was supported by the study of control infants. Persons of blood group A responded more frequently with anti-B and anti-E. coli O(86) antibody production than those of blood group O. Isoantibody increase was accompanied with antibody rise against E. coli O(86). Inhalation of E. coli O(86) or blood group AH(O)-specific hog mucin also evoked isoantibodies. The induced isoantibodies were specifically inhibited by small amounts of human blood group substances. E. coli O(86)-induced anti-blood group antibodies in germ-free chickens and preexisting blood group antibodies in ordinary chickens were neutralized by intravenous injection of E. coli O(86) lipopolysaccharide. This study demonstrates that human isoantibodies A and B are readily elicited via physiological routes, by blood group-active E. coli, provided the genetically determined apparatus of the host is responsive. Antibodies against a person's own blood group were not formed. Interpretation of these results permits some careful generalizations as to the origin of so-called natural antibodies.
...
PMID:Blood group isoantibody stimulation in man by feeding blood group-active bacteria. 489 85


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>