Literature DB >> 19844648

Sialic acid-containing lipopolysaccharides of Salmonella O48 strains--potential role in camouflage and susceptibility to the bactericidal effect of normal human serum.

Gabriela Bugla-Płoskońska1, Jacek Rybka, Bozena Futoma-Kołoch, Agnieszka Cisowska, Andrzej Gamian, Włodzimierz Doroszkiewicz.   

Abstract

Sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid, NeuAc) plays an essential role in protecting gram-negative bacteria against the bactericidal activity of serum and may contribute to the pathogenicity of bacteria by mimicking epitopes that resemble host tissue components (molecular mimicry). The role of sialic acid (NeuAc)-containing lipopolysaccharides (LPS) of Salmonella O48 strains in the complement activation of normal human serum (NHS) was investigated. NeuAc-containing lipooligosaccharides cause a downregulation of complement activation and may serve to camouflage the bacterial surface from the immunological response of the host. Serotype O48 Salmonella strains have the O-antigen structure containing NeuAc while its serovars differ in outer membrane protein composition. In this study, the mechanisms of complement activation responsible for killing Salmonella O48 serum-sensitive rods by NHS were established. Four of such mechanisms involving pathways, which are important in the bactericidal mechanism of complement activation, were distinguished: only the classical/lectin pathways, independent activation of the classical/lectin or alternative pathway, parallel activation of the classical/lectin and alternative pathways, and only the alternative pathway important in the bactericidal action of human serum. To further study the role of NeuAc, its content in bacterial cells was determined by gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry in relation to 3-deoxy-D-manno-2-octulosonic acid (Kdo), an inherent constituent of LPS. The results indicate that neither the presence of sialic acid in LPS nor the length of the O-specific part of LPS containing NeuAc plays a decisive role in determining bacterial resistance to the bactericidal activity of complement and that the presence of sialic acid in the structure of LPS is not sufficient to block the activation of the alternative pathway of complement. We observed that for three strains with a very high NeuAc/Kdo ratio the alternative pathways were decisive in the bactericidal action of human serum. The results indicated that those strains are not capable of inhibiting the alternative pathway very effectively. As the pathogenicity of most Salmonella serotypes remains undefined, research into the interactions between these bacterial cells and host organisms is indispensable.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19844648     DOI: 10.1007/s00248-009-9600-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microb Ecol        ISSN: 0095-3628            Impact factor:   4.552


  30 in total

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3.  Analysis of the SDS-PAGE patterns of outer membrane proteins from Escherichia coli strains that have lost the ability to form K1 antigen and varied in the susceptibility to normal human serum.

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4.  Salmonella O48 Serum Resistance is Connected with the Elongation of the Lipopolysaccharide O-Antigen Containing Sialic Acid.

Authors:  Aleksandra Pawlak; Jacek Rybka; Bartłomiej Dudek; Eva Krzyżewska; Wojciech Rybka; Anna Kędziora; Elżbieta Klausa; Gabriela Bugla-Płoskońska
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