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)

Treatment of outer membranes of Serratia marcescens with polymyxin B results in the formation of blebs. This effect is thought to be due to the action of the antibiotic on the lipopolysaccharides, proteins, phospholipids or a combination thereof. It is unclear whether this effect is dissociative, degradative or due to an inhibition of the assembly of outer membrane components. Prior studies showed that lipopolysaccharides and polymyxin B form complexes, but direct visualization of the in situ action of polymyxin B had not been accomplished. Isolated outer membranes normally exhibit a periodicity of the polysaccharide molecules when stained by the thiosemicarbazide-silver technique. Polymyxin B treated outer membranes display a change in their basic morphology. This effect is very drastic in the sensitive strain as demonstrated by the large gaps in the deposition of the granules in the modified outer membrane structure. Thus it appears that the polysaccharide molecules (probably the lipopolysaccharide) either alone or in association with protein or phospholipids are the primary targets of the antibiotic.
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PMID:Electron microscopic observations of polysaccharide components in polymyxin B treated outer membranes from Serratia marcescens. 8 89

An investigation of the sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) profiles of lipopolysaccharides (LPSs) extracted from seven strains of Helicobacter pylori revealed that these molecules were silver stainable and exhibited a high degree of variability in their patterns. Two strains synthesized a variety of sizes of LPS molecules such that fractionation by SDS-PAGE resulted in a stepwise gradation of bands which extended from the top to the bottom of the silver-stained gel. The LPSs from the remaining five strains were made up of molecules which were more homogeneous in size and clustered around two separate areas of the gel. Antigenic analyses of phenol-water-extracted LPSs by immunoblotting and the passive hemagglutination assay suggested that, in addition to strain-specific antigens, all of the LPSs carried a common antigen. Antibodies to this common antigen could be removed from antisera by absorption, and the resulting antisera were used to differentiate strains on the basis of their O antigens by the passive hemagglutination assay technique. The finding that LPSs from 3 of 10 clinical isolates reacted specifically in one or two of the typing antisera suggested that the development of a scheme for differentiating H. pylori on the basis of O antigens is feasible.
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PMID:Antigenicity of Helicobacter pylori lipopolysaccharides. 128 Jun 51

The possibility of endotoxin transfer across haemodialysis membranes remains a controversial issue. Additional concern has arisen because of the recent introduction in clinical practice of highly permeable, synthetic dialysis membranes and of bacteria-contaminated bicarbonate concentrate with potential short-term and long-term hazards for haemodialysis (HD) patients. Therefore, we performed experiments in an in-vitro dialysis recirculation system using three different types of HD membranes, namely standard regenerated cellulose (Cuprophan, CU), polyacrylonitrile AN-69 (PAN), and polysulphone F-60 (PS). When radiolabelled lipopolysaccharide (125I M-LPS) from E. coli, together with 10 micrograms/ml unlabelled LPS, was added to the recirculating solution in the dialysis compartment, radioactivity could be detected in the blood compartment after 15 min and increased progressively with time up to respectively 6.7% (CU), 10.3% (PAN), and 10.3% (PS) of initial activity on the dialysate side. The addition of albumin to the solution on the blood side led to a decreased permeability of radioactivity (7.3% vs 10.3%), compared to the absence of albumin (tested only for PS membrane). Furthermore, 73% of 125I M-LPS transferred across the PS membrane in the presence of albumin was TCA-precipitable. In contrast, free iodine (Na 125I) incubated in an albumin-containing solution did not precipitate with albumin after the addition of TCA (precipitation of only 0.6%). Moreover, kinetics of transmembranous transfer of Na-125I were strikingly different from that of 125I M-LPS. Analysis by the method of sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of the blood side solution, after LPS addition in the dialysis solution and 30 min of back-filtration, revealed the presence of several silver-stainable and autoradiographic bands of low-molecular-weight range, probably LPS fragments. Finally, the presence of LPS in the dialysate compartment led to a moderate increase in interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF) concentrations in plasma as well as in monocyte culture supernatants after isolation from recirculating normal human whole blood exposed to CU, PAN, or PS membrane. In conclusion, our study provides evidence for the permeation of low-molecular-weight LPS subunits across cellulosic and non-cellulosic HD membranes. The clinical significance, if any, of such a transfer has, however, still to be demonstrated.
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PMID:Permeability of cellulosic and non-cellulosic membranes to endotoxin subunits and cytokine production during in-vitro haemodialysis. 131 77

A transposon Tn5-induced mutant of Rhizobium meliloti Rm2011, designated Rm6963, showed a rough colony morphology on rich and minimal media and an altered lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Major differences from the wild-type LPS were observed in (i) hexose and 2-keto-3-deoxyoctonate elution profiles of crude phenol extracts chromatographed in Sepharose CL-4B, (ii) silver-stained sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns of crude and purified LPS fractions, and (iii) immunoreactivities otherwise present in purified LPS of the parental strain Rm2011. In addition, Rm6963 lost the ability to grow in Luria-Bertani medium containing the hydrophobic compounds sodium deoxycholate or SDS and showed a decrease in survival in TY medium supplemented with high calcium concentrations. The mutant also had altered symbiotic properties. Rm6963 formed nodules that fixed nitrogen but showed a delayed or even reduced ability to nodulate the primary root of alfalfa without showing changes in the position of nodule distribution profiles along the roots. Furthermore, 2 to 3 weeks after inoculation, plants nodulated by Rm6963 were smaller than control plants inoculated with wild-type bacteria in correlation with a transient decrease in nitrogen fixation. In most experiments, the plants recovered later by expressing a full nitrogen-fixing phenotype and developing an abnormally high number of small nodules in lateral roots after 1 month. Rm6963 was also deficient in the ability to compete for nodulation. In coinoculation experiments with equal bacterial numbers of both mutant and wild-type rhizobia, only the parent was recovered from the uppermost root nodules. A strain ratio of approximately 100 to 1 favoring the mutant was necessary to obtain an equal ratio (1:1) of nodule occupancy. These results show that alterations in Rm6963 which include LPS changes lead to an altered symbiotic phenotype during the association with alfalfa that affects the timing of nodule emergence, the progress of nitrogen fixation, and the strain competitiveness for nodulation.
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PMID:A Rhizobium meliloti lipopolysaccharide mutant altered in competitiveness for nodulation of alfalfa. 132 69

The expression of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) by human cerebral endothelium was studied in primary cultures of human brain microvessel endothelial cells following treatment with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). Surface expression of ICAM-1 was examined with the immunogold silver staining technique. Intact cerebral endothelial cells constitutively express low levels of ICAM-1. Stimulation with LPS and cytokines induces upregulation of ICAM-1 which is minimal with IFN-gamma and maximal with LPS or a combination of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha. Upregulation of ICAM-1 expression is concentration- and time-dependent, is observed as early as 4 h following incubation and persists for up to 72 h in the continuous presence of LPS or cytokines. The ICAM-1 expression is not reversed by 3 days after removal of the LPS or cytokines. These findings may be relevant to the interactions between leukocytes and brain microvessel endothelial cells in inflammatory and demyelinating diseases of the CNS.
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PMID:Upregulation of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) expression in primary cultures of human brain microvessel endothelial cells by cytokines and lipopolysaccharide. 135 10

Two structurally and immunologically different components of Bordetella pertussis endotoxin can be visualized by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining: a major A band and a faster-migrating minor B band. Certain mutant strains of B. pertussis express only the B band, while the wild-type strains produce both lipooligosaccharides (LOS). Two monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) directed against the minor LOS B band were generated, allowing the study of this surface molecule on different strains of Bordetella. These two MAbs, designated BL-8 and BL-9, reacted strongly with phenol-water-purified LOS obtained from a B. pertussis LOS B mutant strain. Sodium periodate treatment of the purified LOS prevented binding of the MAbs, indicating the carbohydrate nature of the epitope(s). Western immunoblotting experiments revealed that the epitope(s) recognized by these MAbs is conserved on all B. pertussis and Bordetella bronchiseptica Vir- (avirulent) variant strains tested but is not present on Bordetella parapertussis and B. bronchiseptica Vir+ (virulent) wild-type strains. Further studies showed that although present in the lipopolysaccharide B band expressed by Vir- strains, the epitope(s) recognized by the MAbs is not accessible on the surface of intact B. bronchiseptica cells. For B. pertussis, the density and accessibility of this epitope(s) are dependent on the virulence-associated or LOS phenotype expressed by the strain. Our data demonstrate that the expression and accessibility of the epitope(s) are significantly greater on the LOS B variant strains and LOS AB Vir- strains compared with fresh B. pertussis clinical isolates. For these latter strains, which are Vir+, this epitope(s) was barely detectable on the surface of intact bacteria, despite Western blot analyses that revealed specific reactions between the MAbs and the LOS B band. The two LOS B-specific MAbs had no bacteriolytic activity against a LOS AB wild-type strain, while the control MAb BL-2, which is specific for the B. pertussis LOS A band, significantly reduced the number of living bacteria in the same assay. Moderate lytic activity against a mutant strain expressing only the LOS B band was observed for MAb BL-8 but not for MAb BL-9 or BL-2. These data demonstrate that the type, amount, and surface exposure of the LOS are related to the phenotype expressed by a specific B. pertussis strain. In addition, the LOS B MAbs also reveal the antigenic conservation of carbohydrate epitopes among B. pertussis and B. bronchiseptica strains.
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PMID:Immunological characterization of the lipooligosaccharide B band of Bordetella pertussis. 137 81

An antiserum raised against a single strain of Pseudomonas pseudomallei reacted equally in a whole cell agglutination test, an indirect haemagglutination (IHA) test and an ELISA with a panel of 12 strains of the species which had been isolated from human beings and animals in various parts of the Far East and Australia between 1923 and 1990. Absorption of the serum with either of two strains removed all reactivity of the serum with other strains. Phenol-water extracted lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from a single strain blocked the reactivity of the serum with red cells sensitised with crude extracts of any of the panel of strains, thereby suggesting that the 'common' antigen was LPS. This antigen was not detected in other Pseudomonas species with the exception of Pseudomonas mallei. Protease K-digested extracts of the 12 strains gave highly similar silver-stained LPS banding patterns in gel electrophoresis. Furthermore, immunoblots of LPS with either rabbit or a patient's serum showed identical ladder profiles for each strain. The results suggest that the LPS antigen is highly conserved throughout P. pseudomallei and that this antigen is detected by the IHA test.
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PMID:Homogeneity of lipopolysaccharide antigens in Pseudomonas pseudomallei. 138 39

Lipopolysaccharide from serostrains of Serpulina (Treponema) hyodysenteriae for serogroups A to I was characterized using sodium dodecylsulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining. All strains had lipopolysaccharide components ranging from 10 to 16 kDa that represented lipid A-core polysaccharide regions, and short O-antigen side chain were also recognized in certain immunoblots. Serological reactions between lipopolysaccharide and antisera against each of these serostrains were examined by Western immunoblotting. There was relatively little antigenic cross-reactivity between LPS from the nine strains, thus confirming their suitability as serostrains. Using cross-absorbed sera, isolates within serogroups A and E were shown to possess unique epitopes on the core lipopolysaccharide, distinct from serogroup reactivities. These isolates were therefore identified as serovars within the serogroups. This study confirmed the usefulness of the serotyping scheme for S. hyodysenteriae, in which the bacteria can be placed into serogroups using unabsorbed sera, and into serovars within these using cross-absorbed sera.
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PMID:The serological grouping system for Serpulina (Treponema) hyodysenteriae. 139 14

The majority of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains synthesize two antigenically distinct types of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), namely, a serotype-specific B-band LPS and a common antigen A-band LPS. A-band LPS consists of uncharged poly-D-rhamnan, which does not bind uranyl ions and is difficult to stain for electron microscopy; the highly charged B-band LPS is more easily visualized. We selected two wild-type strains, PAO1 (serotype O5) and IATS O6 (serotype O6), generated isogenic mutants from them, and examined the distribution of LPS on the surface of these organisms by freeze-substitution and electron microscopy. On PAO1 cells, which express both A-band and B-band LPSs, a 31- to 36-nm-wide fringe extending perpendicularly from the outer membrane was observed. A fine fibrous material was also observed on the surface of serotype O6 (A+ B+) cells, although this material did not form a uniform layer. When the LPS-deficient mutants, strains AK1401 (A+ B-), AK 1012 (A- B-), rd7513 (A- B-), and R5 (an IATS O6-derived rough mutant; A- B-), were examined, no extraneous material was apparent above the bilayer. However, an asymmetrical staining pattern was observed on the outer leaflet of the outer membrane of each of these mutants, presumably conforming to the anionic charge distribution of the core region of the rough LPS. In all cases, expression of the LPS types was confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining. When optical densitometry on electron microscopy negatives was used to analyze the outer membrane staining profiles, subtle differences in the degrees of core deficiency among rough mutants were detectable. This is the first time an electron microscopy technique has preserved the infrastructure produced in the outer membrane by its constituent macromolecules. We conclude that freeze-substitution electron microscopy is effective in the visualization of LPS morphotypes.
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PMID:Ultrastructural examination of the lipopolysaccharides of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains and their isogenic rough mutants by freeze-substitution. 142 38

The ultrastructural features and molecular components of 18 strains of Fusobacterium necrophorum biovars A, AB and B, isolated from animal and human infections, were examined by electron microscopy, multilocus enzyme electrophoresis (MEE) and by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). High resolution scanning electron microscopy revealed that the strains possessed a convoluted surface pattern. Transmission electron microscopy showed that all strains possessed a cell wall structure typical of gram-negative bacteria. Bleb formation was not uncommon. Numerous extracellular materials, resembling lipopolysaccharide (LPS) fragments, surrounded cells of both human strains and biovar B animal strains. Biovar A field strains revealed capsules as stained by ruthenium red whereas a stock culture strain showed the capsule only when immunostabilized with hyperimmune serum. Starch gel electrophoresis showed all strains to possess adenyl kinase, glutamate dehydrogenases and lactate dehydrogenase; each enzyme migrated uniformly (monomorphic) among the strains and represented an electrotype. However, SDS-PAGE indicated differences in the protein profiles between all of the strains; the most distinctly different was a human isolate (FN 606). Silver staining to detect LPS showed extensive "ladder" patterns among the majority of biovar A strains but not in the animal biovar B strains. Immunoblotting of LPS with a rabbit antiserum prepared against phenol extracted LPS from a biovar A animal isolate (LA 19) suggested marked variability in the LPS antigens among the isolates studied.
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PMID:Ultrastructure and molecular characterization of Fusobacterium necrophorum biovars. 147 1


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