| Literature DB >> 26861940 |
Sabina Górska1, Barbara Buda2, Ewa Brzozowska3, Martin Schwarzer4, Dagmar Srutkova4, Hana Kozakova4, Andrzej Gamian3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The genus Lactobacillus belongs to a large heterogeneous group of low G + C Gram-positive anaerobic bacteria, which are frequently used as probiotics. The health-beneficial effects, in particular the immunomodulation effect, of probiotics depend on the strain and dose used. Strain variations may be related to diversity of the cell surface architecture of bacteria and the ability to express specific antigens or secrete compounds. The use of Lactobacillus as probiotic requires a comprehensive understanding of its effect on host immune system. To evaluate the potential immunoreactive properties of proteins isolated from four Lactobacillus strains: L. johnsonii 142 and L. johnsonii 151, L. rhamnosus LOCK 0900 and L. casei LOCK 0919, the polyclonal sera obtained from mouse and human have been tested as well as with sera from rabbits immunized with whole lactobacilli cells.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26861940 PMCID: PMC4748627 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-016-0631-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Fig. 1SDS-PAGE profile with Coomassie Brilliant Blue staining of proteins isolated from Lactobacillus strains: M – low molecular mass marker, 1 – L. johnsonii 142, 2 – L. johnsonii 151, 3 – L. rhamnosus LOCK 0900, 4 – L. casei LOCK 0919. These images were cut from the same gel, merged and the appropriate scaling was used
Fig. 2Immunoblotting of proteins isolated from analyzed strains: M – low molecular mass marker: 94, 67, 43, 30, 20.1, 14.4 kDa, line 1 – L. johnsonii 142, line 2 – L. johnsonii 151, line 3 – L. rhamnosus LOCK 0900, line 4 – L. casei LOCK 0919, with sera: s1– rabbit polyclonal serum against L. paracasei LOCK 0912, s2 – rabbit polyclonal serum against L. animalis murinus 148, s3 – rabbit polyclonal serum against L. johnsonii 142, s4 – rabbit polyclonal serum against L. johnsonii 151, s5 – serum from germ free mouse, s6 – serum from mouse living under pathogen free conditions, s7 – serum from mouse living under conventional conditions, s8-s10 sera from human healthy adults, s11-s13 human umbilical cord blood sera. These images were cut from the same gel, merged and the appropriate scaling was used
Fig. 3The SDS-PAGE profile of a separated proteins isolated from Lactobacillus johnsonii 151 in the presence of low molecular mass marker – 94, 67, 43, 30, 20.1, 14.4 kDa by continuous-elution electrophoresis (Prep-Cell apparatus Model 491 Bio-Rad). Samples are electrophoresed through a cylindrical gel. As molecules migrate through the gel matrix, they separate into bands. Individual bands migrate off the bottom of the gel where they pass directly into the patented elution chamber for collection. The resulting liquid fractions (2 ml) were pooled (5 fractions), dried and analyzed on SDS-PAGE. Gels were stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue
Fig. 4The selected immunoblots of separated proteins: A – immunoreactive protein of L. johnsonii 142 reacting with homologous serum (s3), B – immunoreactive proteins of L. johnsonii 142 reacting with anti-L. paracasei LOCK 0912 (s1), C – immunoreactive protein of L. johnsonii 151 reacting with anti-L. johnsonii 151 (s4), D – immunoreactive proteins of L. rhamnosus LOCK 0900 reacting with anti-L. paracasei LOCK0912 (s1), E – immunoreactive proteins of L. rhamnosus LOCK 0900 reacting with human cord blood sera (s12), F – immunoreactive proteins L. casei LOCK 0919 reacting with mouse CV sera (s6), G – immunoreactive proteins L. casei LOCK 0919 reacting with rabbit anti-L. paracasei LOCK 0912 (s1). These images were taken from different blots, merged and the appropriate scaling was used
Identification of immunoreactive proteins isolated from Lactobacillus strain
| Strain number | Estimated molecular mass of isolated protein [kDa] | Homologous protein name | Nominal molecular mass of homologous proteins [kDa] | Origin of homologous protein | Decription | Homology [%] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 20 | 30S ribosomal protein S7 (gi׀116495953) | 17,912 |
| It is directly linked to the 16S rRNA | 60 |
| 38 | Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) (gi׀199597272) | 36,929 |
| It is involved in the glucose metabolism and has oxidoreductase activity | 67 | |
| 40 | surface antigen NLP/P60 (gi ׀199598074) | 40,947 |
| Human mucus binding proteinn | 48 | |
| 42 | phosphoglycerate kinase (gi ׀199597273) | 42,187 |
| It is involved in glycolysis. Transfers a phosphate group from 1,3-bisfosfoglicerynianu to ADP creating 3-phosphoglycerate and ATP. | 79 | |
|
| 45 | Hypothetical protein JDM1_1307 (gi ׀254556474) | 44,729 |
| Function unknown | 39 |
|
| 35 | Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) (gi׀ 116494473) | 36,912 |
| It is involved in the glucose metabolism and has oxidoreductase activity | 60 |
| Fructose/tagatose-bisphosphate-aldolase (gi׀ 229551479) | 36,360 |
| It is involved in the metabolism of carbohydrates. It also participates in the binding of zinc ions, and its activity is stimulated by some bivalent ions | 59 | ||
| 50 | Aminopeptidase C (gi׀258509341) | 50,737 |
| It is involved in proteolysis | 31 | |
|
| 30 | Fructose/Tagatose-bisphosphate-aldolase (gi׀ 116493996) | 31,640 |
| It is involved in the metabolism of carbohydrates. It also participates in the binding of zinc ions, and its activity is stimulated by some bivalent ions | 88 |
| 50 | Glucose-6-phosphate isomerase (gi׀ 116494625) | 49,292 |
| Catalyze the reaction: transformation of D-glucose-6-phosphate into D-fructose-6-phosphate | 42 |