Affiliation:
1. Molecular Infectious Diseases Group, Institute of Molecular Medicine, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Abstract
Cloned Haemophilus influenzae type b capsulation genes were used as hybridization probes to isolate DNA from the capsulation loci (cap) of other serotypes of H. influenzae. Mapping of the resulting clones and Southern hybridization analysis of chromosomal DNAs from type a, b, c, and d strains showed that in each strain cap was organized in the same way: a central DNA segment specific to each serotype flanked by DNA segments of common structure. We infer that enzymes necessary for the synthesis of specific capsular polysaccharide are encoded in the central segment of cap, while proteins involved in a more general way in the process of capsulation are encoded in the flanking segments. Studies of the function of the DNA in one of these non-serotype-specific flanking segments (J. S. Kroll, I. Hopkins, and E. R. Moxon, Cell 53:347-356, 1988) have previously identified a gene encoding a protein necessary for polysaccharide export, an event now deduced to proceed by a mechanism independent of the nature of the disaccharide subunit in the polysaccharide. The near-total duplication of cap that has been found in most type b strains was not found at the analogous locus in the other serotypes. This reinforces our previous hypothesis, based on study of type b strains alone, that while such a duplication is unnecessary for capsulation, it confers some unexplained survival advantage on the widely prevalent strains with this clinically important serotype.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
89 articles.
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