| Literature DB >> 17658271 |
Zhan Wang1, Xin Liu, Andrew Dacanay, Blair A Harrison, Mark Fast, Duncan J Colquhoun, Vera Lund, Laura L Brown, Jianjun Li, Eleonora Altman.
Abstract
The cell envelope of Aeromonas salmonicida contains a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) essential for the physical integrity and functioning of bacterial cell membrane. Using a recently developed in-source fragmentation technique, we screened 39 typical and atypical isolates of A. salmonicida and established their O-chain polysaccharide structure by capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (CE-MS), compositional and linkage analyses and comparison to the previously determined O-chain polysaccharide structure of A. salmonicida strain A449. These studies have demonstrated that A. salmonicida isolates fall into three distinct structural types, types A-C, based on chemical structures of their respective O-chain polysaccharide components. Subsequent immunoblotting and serological studies with salmon polyclonal antisera produced to formalin-fixed cells of A. salmonicida strains A449, N4705 and 33659 representing three structural types A-C revealed that variations in the O-chain polysaccharide structure have led to significant serological differences between strains belonging to type A and non-type A, where non-type A species include chemically separated structural types B and C. Due to the presence of common antigenic determinants shared by their respective O-chain polysaccharide components, serological cross-reactions were observed between A. salmonicida strains belonging to structural types B and C. These findings suggest the possibility of developing LPS-based classification system of A. salmonicida sub-species consisting of two serologically distinct types, type A and non-type A.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17658271 DOI: 10.1016/j.fsi.2007.05.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fish Shellfish Immunol ISSN: 1050-4648 Impact factor: 4.581