Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Viral Diseases and Laboratory of Microbiology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland 20014
Abstract
Monkey, rat, and chicken tracheal epithelial cells, as well as monkey, rat, guinea pig, and chicken erythrocytes, adsorbed firmly to colonies of
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
and
M. gallisepticum
. Colonies of
M. pulmonis
also adsorbed erythrocytes but with less avidity than
M. pneumoniae
or
M. gallisepticum
; unlike the latter organisms,
M. pulmonis
did not adsorb tracheal epithelial cells. Colonies of
M. orale
type 1 and
M. orale
type 3 adsorbed only chicken red cells. Other mycoplasma species tested, including four of human origin and one of animal origin, did not adsorb red cells or epithelial cells.
M. pneumoniae
and
M. gallisepticum
appeared to attach to erythrocytes or tracheal epithelial cells by neuraminic acid receptors on these cells, whereas
M. orale
types 1 and 3 and
M. pulmonis
seemed to utilize another type or other types of receptors. Pretreatment of red cells or tracheal epithelial cells with receptor-destroying enzyme, neuraminidase, or influenza B virus removed the adsorption receptors for
M. pneumoniae
. Similarly, pretreatment of
M. pneumoniae
colonies with neuraminic acid-containing materials prevented adsorption of erythrocytes or respiratory tract cells. The adsorption sites on
M. pneumoniae
were specifically blocked by homologous but not heterologous antisera. This property made it possible to study the nature of the mycoplasma adsorption sites by testing the capacity of different fractions of the organism to block the action of adsorption-inhibiting antibodies. Such studies suggested that the mycoplasma binding sites were probably lipid or lipoprotein in nature. The glycerophospholipid hapten was implicated as one such site, since this serologically active hapten blocked the action of hemadsorption-inhibiting antibodies in
M. pneumoniae
rabbit antiserum. The affinity of
M. pneumoniae
for respiratory tract epithelium, unique among the mycoplasmas that infect man, may play a role in virulence, since this type of attachment provides an unusual opportunity for peroxide, secreted by the organism, to attack the tissue cell membrane without being rapidly destroyed by catalase or peroxidase present in extracellular body fluids.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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