Author:
Smith S. H.,Murray R. G. E.,Hall M.
Abstract
Leptotrichia buccalis shows a mosaic of surface structure on its outer membrane consisting of curved ridges 35 nm high and 22 nm apart, and erect on that surface. Fimbriae (common pili) are not present and nor is an S layer. The flap-like ridges consist of strings of macromolecules radiating from the cell surface. This ridge structure is not soluble in any of the usual chaotropes and can only be released when the outer membrane has been damaged or dispersed by extracting envelope preparations with 0.5% SDS at room temperature. The ridge is then found to be attached firmly to the peptidoglycan sacculus, which may be the point of origin of the structure. When so prepared the macromolecules forming the ridge can be removed from the sacculus by treatment with 6 M guanidine HCl, and SDS-PAGE analysis of the extract reveals a 210-kDa polypeptide as a major component and a 15-kDa minor component. The latter is probably a peptidoglycan-associated protein and much of it remains with the sacculus. Each string forming the ridge is of a volume consistent with being made of three elongated 210-kDa molecules, which are united in series by strong hydrophobic association and laterally with neighboring strings by slightly weaker forces. We confirm that L. buccalis causes haemagglutination and the bacteria are known to attach to various tissue cells. Human group A red blood corpuscles remove both of the proteins from solution, which supports the hypothesis that the ridges are adhesin structures. It is likely but not proven that the 210-kDa molecule is the adhesin.Key words: Leptotrichia buccalis, cell wall, S layer, protein array, adhesin.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Genetics,Molecular Biology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
10 articles.
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