|
|
Knirel Y.A., Lindner B., Vinogradov E.V.,
Kocharova N.A., Senchenkova S.N., Shaikhutdinova R.Z., Dentovskaya S.V., Fursova N.K., Bakhteeva I.V.,
Titareva G.M., Balakhonov S.V., Holst O., Gremyakova T.A., Pier G.B., Anisimov A.P. |
Temperature-dependent variations and intraspecies diversity of the structure of the
lipopolysaccharide of Yersinia pestis |
Biochemistry. – 2005. – V. 45. – P. 1731-1743. |
| |
|
Abstract
Yersinia pestis spread throughout the Americas in the early 20th century, and it occurs
predominantly as a single clone within this part of the world. However, within Eurasia and parts of Africa
there is significant diversity among Y. pestis strains, which can be classified into different biovars (bv.)
and/or subspecies (ssp.), with bv. orientalis/ssp. pestis most closely related to the American clone. To
determine one aspect of the relatedness of these different Y. pestis isolates, the structure of the
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of four wild-type and one LPS-mutant Eurasian/African strains of Y. pestis was
determined, evaluating effects of growth at mammalian (37 °C) or flea (25 °C) temperatures on the structure
and composition of the core oligosaccharide and lipid A. In the wild-type clones of ssp. pestis, a single
major core glycoform was synthesized at 37 °C whereas multiple core oligosaccharide glycoforms were
produced at 25 °C. Structural differences occurred primarily in the terminal monosaccharides. Only tetraacyl
lipid A was made at 37 °C, whereas at 25 °C additional pentaacyl and hexaacyl lipid A structures were
produced. 4-Amino-4-deoxyarabinose levels in lipid A increased with lower growth temperatures or when
bacteria were cultured in the presence of polymyxin B. In Y. pestis ssp. caucasica, the LPS core lacked
D-glycero-D-manno-heptose and the content of 4-amino-4-deoxyarabinose showed no dependence on growth
temperature, whereas the degree of acylation of the lipid A and the structure of the oligosaccharide core
were temperature dependent. A spontaneous deep-rough LPS mutant strain possessed only a disaccharide
core and a slightly variant lipid A. The diversity and differences in the structure of the Y. pestis LPS
suggest important contributions of these variations to the pathogenesis of this organism, potentially related
to innate and acquired immune recognition of Y. pestis and epidemiologic means to detect, classify, control
and respond to Y. pestis infections. |
Вернуться в раздел Публикации 2005 г.
|
|