Literature DB >> 11010975

Germ-free and colonized mice generate the same products from enteric prodefensins.

K Putsep1, L G Axelsson, A Boman, T Midtvedt, S Normark, H G Boman, M Andersson.   

Abstract

The use of germ-free mice offers the possibility to study antibacterial components in a gut uncolonized by bacteria. We have developed a method to extract and high pressure liquid chromatography-fractionate the antibacterial factors present in the small intestine of a single mouse. By mass spectrometry and sequence analyses of fractions exhibiting antimicrobial activity, we identified and characterized the defensin region in germ-free mice as well as in colonized mice. Defensins made up around 15% of the total antibacterial activity both in germ-free and colonized mice. The intestine of germ-free mice exhibited the same set of mature enteric defensins (defensins 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6) as mice colonized by a normal microflora. Mature defensins are generated through processing of larger precursors by enzymatic removal of a signal peptide and a propiece. We found that all prodefensins were cleaved at a Ser/Ala-Leu bond, giving 34-residue propiece peptides and only trace amounts of the predicted 39-residue peptide. This first step must be followed by the removal of a residual peptide to render the mature defensins, indicating that the processing is more complex than previously anticipated. The same propieces were found in both germ-free and colonized mice, suggesting that the same processing operates independent of bacterial presence in the intestine.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11010975     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M007816200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  46 in total

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