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Journal of Bacteriology, October 2007, p. 7244-7253, Vol. 189, No. 20
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00605-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Tea Blom,1,
José Antonio Bengoechea,5
Camino Pérez-Gutiérrez,5
Peter Ahrens,4,
and
Jeffrey Hoorfar3
Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, Haartman Institute, University of Helsinki,1 Helsinki University Central Hospital Laboratory Diagnostics, Helsinki, Finland,2 National Food Institute,3 National Veterinary Institute, Technical University of Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark,4 Unidad de Investigacion, Hospital Son Dureta, Palma Mallorca, and Program Infection and Immunity, Fundación Caubet-Cimera Illes Balears, Bunyola, Spain5
Received 19 April 2007/ Accepted 16 July 2007
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Homopolymeric OPSs are synthesized at the cytoplasmic face of the inner membrane. The OPS synthesis from nucleotide diphosphate-activated sugar precursors on the membrane-bound carrier undecaprenylphosphate is carried out by glycosyltransferases. Full-length polymer is then translocated to the periplasm by the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter formed by Wzt and Wzm. Subsequently, the polymer is ligated to preformed lipid A-core compounds and further translocated to the outer membrane (55).
The genes encoding enzymes necessary for the OPS biosynthesis are usually clustered in the bacterial chromosome (60). In the genus Yersinia the locus between hemH and gsk contains the genes required for the biosynthesis of the heteropolymeric OPSs (57, 63, 64, 66). In serotypes O:9 and O:3, however, the hemH-gsk locus is occupied by the OC gene cluster, thereby indicating that the OPS gene cluster is located elsewhere in the genome (63, 65, 66).
In this work, we present the cloning and characterization of the Y. enterocolitica serotype O:9 OPS gene cluster. Due to the branched nature of the OC in LPS, mutants lacking OC but keeping the OPS and vice versa were constructed. We demonstrated that these mutants have both polymyxin B and serum resistance defects.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains, plasmids, bacteriophages, and bacteriocins used in this work
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Recombinant DNA methods. DNA isolations, restriction enzyme digestions, and DNA ligations were performed as described previously (7, 58). For PCR screening reactions, bacteria resuspended in 100 µl of water were incubated for 5 min at 95°C. Subsequently, 100 µl of phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) was added, and samples were vortexed and centrifuged for 5 min at 13,000 x g. A 5-µl aliquot of the upper DNA-containing phase was used as a PCR template. E. coli was transformed by electroporation or by the Hanahan method (36). Single-step screening of recombinant clones was performed as described earlier (13).
Construction of pUC and cosmid genomic libraries. Genomic libraries of strain Ruokola/71-c were constructed in E. coli strain C600 using pUC18 as a cloning vector. Both the genomic and the vector DNA were digested with BamHI, ClaI, EcoRI, HindIII, PstI, HindIII/BamHI, or HindIII/EcoRI or with HindIII/PstI prior to ligation. A cosmid library was constructed by cloning partially Sau3AI-digested genomic DNA of Ruokola/71-c into cosmid pHC79 using the lambda packaging system (GE Healthcare).
PCR strategies. Short-range PCR was performed using the thermostable DNA polymerase DynaZyme II (Finnzymes, Espoo, Finland) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Reaction conditions for PCR cycles were adjusted according to the oligonucleotide primers and the length of the amplified fragment.
The previously sequenced perosamine synthetase (per) genes of Vibrio cholerae (accession no. X59554), Vibrio anguillarum (accession no. AF025396), E. coli O157:H7 (accession no. AF061251), and Brucella melitensis biovar 1 (accession no. AF047478) (50 to 60% identical to each other) served to design degenerate primers (Table 2). These were used to amplify a 335-bp fragment of the per gene of Y. enterocolitica O:9. This PCR fragment was used as a probe to screen the libraries by colony hybridization and also for Southern hybridization as described below.
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TABLE 2. Primers used in this work
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Nucleotide sequencing and sequence analysis. Nucleotide sequencing reactions were performed on ABI373A and ABI377 automatic sequencers using the AmpliTaq FS dye terminator kit or the Prism BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Kit (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Nucleotide sequence analysis was performed using the computer programs of the Wisconsin Package Version 10.0 (Genetics Computer Group, Madison, WI) and the EMBOSS programs and the HIBIO DNASIS program for Windows, Higgins and Sharp algorithm (CLUSTAL 4) (37). NCBI and EBI databases were searched using the BLAST programs (4). Similar amino acid sequences were aligned using the PILEUP program of the Genetics Computer Group package.
Construction of per, galF, and galU suicide vectors for allelic exchange. pRV1, a Clmr derivative of the suicide vector pJM703.1, was used to construct genomic insertion derivatives by allelic exchange (68).
The suicide vector pRV1-WBO:9SacGB (Table 1) for the per gene inactivation was constructed by cloning the 2.6-kb SacI fragment containing the per gene from pPSL into pUC18. The resulting plasmid was named pWBO:9Sac and maintained in E. coli C600. The 1.2-kb kanamycin resistance gene block (KmGB) of pUC4K was cloned into the EcoRV site within the per gene of pWBO:9Sac to get plasmid pWBO:9SacGB. The 4-kb PvuII fragment of pWBO:9SacGB was cloned into the EcoRV site of the suicide vector pRV1 to get plasmid pRV1-WBO:9SacGB, which was maintained in E. coli SY327
pir.
The suicide vector pRV1-galF-Nsi:GB (Table 1) for the galF gene inactivation was constructed by cloning the galF-containing PvuII fragment of pPSL into pRV1. The resulting plasmid was named pRV1-galF. Deletion of the galF-internal 0.4-kb NsiI fragment resulted in plasmid pRV1-galF-Nsi. The KmGB was cloned into the NsiI site of the pRV1-galF-Nsi to get pRV1-galF-Nsi:GB, which was maintained in E. coli SY327
pir.
The suicide vector pRV1-galU-del (Table 1) for the galU gene inactivation was constructed by cloning the galU-containing MscI fragment of pPSL into pRV1. The resulting plasmid was named pRV1-galU. An 800-bp internal deletion in the galU gene of pRV1-galU was engineered by plasmid-PCR (20) using primers galU-f and galU-r (Table 2) to get plasmid pRV1-galU-del, which was maintained in E. coli SY327
pir and from there transformed into Sm10
pir.
The suicide vector pRV19-GB (Table 1) for the OC gene cluster inactivation has been described previously (68).
Inactivation of genes by allelic exchange.
Direct or triparental conjugation to Y. enterocolitica O:9 strains Ruokola/71 and Ruokola/71-c was performed to mobilize the suicide vectors pRV1-galF-NsiGB, pRV1-galU-del, pRV19-GB, and pRV1-WBO:9SacGB from E. coli SY327
pir. or Sm10
pir, as described earlier (68). Triparental conjugation was performed using the helper strain HB101/pRK2013 (Table 1). Transconjugants having the suicide vectors integrated by homologous recombination into the bacterial chromosome were subjected to cycloserine enrichment to select clones in which the second homologous recombination event had eliminated the suicide vector and the wild-type allele (34, 54). The constructed mutants were verified by PCR, Southern blotting, and/or sequencing. The LPS phenotype was analyzed by deoxycholate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (DOC-PAGE; see below).
Isolation of spontaneous Y. enterocolitica O:9 OC mutants using
R1-37.
Bacteriophage
R1-37 was used to isolate spontaneous OC mutants. An overnight LB culture of the Y. enterocolitica O:9 strain was spread as a lawn on LA plates. A few drops of
R1-37 were pipetted on the dried bacterial lawn. After 2 days of incubation, individual phage-resistant colonies were picked from the lysis zone and subjected to the same treatment several times. To verify the loss of OC, LPSs from
R1-37-resistant bacteria were analyzed by DOC-PAGE.
PCR-based promoter identification. PCR fragments containing selected intergenic regions, amplified using primers listed in Table 2, were cloned into the promoter trapping vector pKK232-8 (Table 1). The vector contains a promoterless cat gene encoding chloramphenicol acetyltransferase; thus, Clmr clones can be obtained only when a fragment containing promoter activity is cloned upstream of the cat gene. Transformants displaying promoter activity were selected on chloramphenicol plates. The inserted PCR fragments in the recovered plasmids were analyzed by sequencing.
Isolation and analysis of LPS.
LPSs from OC and OPS mutant candidates were checked by DOC-PAGE. For small-scale LPS isolation, a modified version of the protocol devised by Hitchcock and Brown was used (11, 39). Overnight 5-ml bacterial cultures were diluted to obtain an optical density at 540 nm (OD540) of <1. A 1.5-ml aliquot of the suspension was centrifuged in a microcentrifuge (13,000 x g, 3 min), and bacteria were resuspended in DOC lysis buffer (2% DOC, 4% 2-mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, and 0.002% bromophenol blue in 1 M Tris-HCl buffer, pH 6.8) in a volume adjusted according to the OD540 of the culture (100 µl of DOC lysis buffer/OD540 = 1.0). Samples were heated at 100°C for 10 min, and then 2 µl of proteinase K (20-mg/ml stock solution) was added. Samples were incubated at 55°C for
1 h. Samples were stored at –20°C until analyzed by DOC-PAGE as described previously (68).
Anti-Y. enterocolitica O:9 antiserum and slide agglutination. Rabbit antiserum S-3 against formalin-killed Ruokola/71 bacteria was raised as described earlier (2). For the slide agglutination test the antiserum was diluted 1:100 in 0.9% NaCl.
Human serum and serum killing assay.
Blood was obtained from healthy human donors who were devoid of anti-Yersinia antibodies. Sera were pooled and stored in aliquots at –70°C as described earlier (14). The killing assay was performed as described previously (14). Briefly,
500 to 1,000 bacteria were incubated at 37°C for 30 and 120 min in 30 µl of 66.7% normal human serum (NHS), heat-inactivated serum, or EGTA-Mg serum. The latter contained 10 mM EGTA and 5 mM MgCl2. Surviving bacteria were cultured and counted after growth on LA plates. The serum bactericidal effect was calculated as the survival percentage using the bacterial counts obtained with bacteria incubated in heat-inactivated serum as 100%. The killing experiment was repeated for each strain at least three times starting from independent cultures.
Polymyxin B resistance. Yersinia strains grown in 5 ml of LB either at 37°C or at 21°C were harvested (5,000 x g, 15 min, 5°C) in the exponential phase of growth. Bacteria were suspended in 1% (wt/vol) tryptone in phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.4) to approximately 2.1 x 105 CFU/ml. Ten microliters of the suspension was mixed with various concentrations of polymyxin B in a volume of 200 µl and incubated at the original bacterial growth temperature for 30 min. Subsequently, 100 µl of the suspensions was directly plated on LB agar plates. The plates were incubated at 26°C, and colony counts were determined. The results were expressed as survival percentages, taking the colony counts of bacteria not exposed to antibacterial agents as 100%. The 50% inhibitory concentration of antimicrobial peptides (IC50) was defined as the concentrations showing a 50% reduction in the colony count compared with bacteria not exposed to the antibacterial agent (21). All experiments were done in duplicate and on four independent occasions.
Statistical methods. Statistical analyses were performed using the analysis of variance or the two-sample t test or, when the requirements were not met, by the Mann-Whitney U test. A P value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The sequence data were annotated and submitted to the European Bioinformatics Institute (accession number AJ605741).
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Assignment of putative functions to open reading frames. We identified 12 genes located upstream of the gnd gene. The genes were annotated based on similarity to sequences in the databases (Fig. 1; Table 3). The manB, manC, gmd, per, wbcV, and wbcT genes are predicted to encode enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of GDP-N-formylperosamine. The wbcU and wbcW genes are predicted to encode the N-formylperosaminyltransferases assembling the homopolymeric OPS onto undecaprenylphosphate carrier lipid while the wzm and wzt genes encode proteins for the transport of the OPS into the periplasm. The gnd gene encodes gluconate-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, which does not participate in OPS synthesis. The genes galU and galF, identified between the manB and gmd genes, however, were not assigned a clear function in the OPS biosynthesis.
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FIG. 1. OPS gene cluster of Y. enterocolitica O:9. The gene cluster figures were generated from the sequence files under the accession numbers AJ605741 for Y. enterocolitica O:9 and AF047478 for B. melitensis using the ggnVIEW sequence file viewer (http://colibase.bham.ac.uk/cgi-bin/fileprepare.cgi). The identified and predicted promoter locations of the O:9 gene cluster are indicated with bent arrows. The orf1 gene (Table 3), present in the reverse direction upstream of the manC gene, is not shown. The regions of homology between the gene clusters are indicated with shadowed quadrangles, and the percentages of identity between the predicted amino acid sequences are given.
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TABLE 3. OPS gene cluster of Y. enterocolitica O:9: genes, gene products, and similarities
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Characterization of Y. enterocolitica O:9 galF and galU mutants. Two genes showing sequence similarity to the galU and galF genes were identified within the O:9 OPS gene cluster. The presence of these genes in the cluster was unexpected, as they both code for UTP-glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase (EC 2.7.7.9; also called UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase), which catalyzes the conversion of glucose-1-phosphate to UDP-glucose. UDP-glucose is a central nucleotide sugar in carbohydrate metabolism but redundant for the perosamine synthesis. We aimed to study the role of the galU and galF genes in the OPS gene cluster of Y. enterocolitica O:9. We thus inactivated the galU and galF genes and analyzed the LPS profiles and growth rates of the mutants. To inactivate the genes, suicide plasmids carrying the inactivated galU and galF genes were constructed and introduced into the Y. enterocolitica O:9 strains. No viable O:9 galU mutants were obtained. It suggested that there is only one copy of this gene in the chromosome and that it is essential for Y. enterocolitica O:9. On the other hand, we successfully constructed a galF mutant. The LPS profile of the galF mutant, analyzed by DOC-PAGE (Fig. 2), did not differ from that of the wild type. The growth of the mutant was not affected (data not shown).
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FIG. 2. DOC-PAGE analysis of the LPS of wild-type and mutant strains grown overnight at RT. Strains are indicated at the top, and the different parts of LPS are indicated at the right. The peculiar situation of the LPS of Y. enterocolitica O:9 is demonstrated here; the OC likely represents a nonpolymerized O unit attached to typical (inner) core oligosaccharide.
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Polymyxin B resistance of Y. enterocolitica O:9 OPS and OC mutants. In several pathogens the LPS confers resistance to cationic antimicrobial peptides including polymyxin B (47, 67). We thus aimed to elucidate whether Y. enterocolitica O:9 LPS mediates resistance to polymyxin B. To this end we analyzed the polymyxin resistance phenotypes of the wild-type strain Ruokola/71 and OPS-negative (YeO9-R1), OC-negative (YeO9-OC), and OPS-negative and OC-negative (YeO9-OCR) strains in a survival assay. We also determined the IC50 values of the strains. In general, the resistance of the strains to polymyxin B was growth temperature dependent.
In the survival assay all strains grown at RT displayed high, wild-type-level resistance to polymyxin B (Fig. 3A). The IC50 values revealed, however, slight (less-than-twofold) differences between the RT-grown strains: the most sensitive was YeO9-OCR (IC50, 50 ± 6 units/ml), followed by YeO9-OC (74 ± 7 units/ml), YeO9-R1 (84 ± 5 units/ml), and the wild-type strain (90 ± 9 units/ml). The value of YeO9-OCR was significantly different (P < 0.05) from that of YeO9-R1 and the wild-type strains. The other differences were not significant.
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FIG. 3. Role of LPS phenotype in resistance of Y. enterocolitica O:9 to polymyxin B. Bacteria were grown either at RT (A) or at 37°C (B). *, P < 0.05, significant difference from wild-type strain; , P < 0.05, significant difference from OC mutant.
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The role of Y. enterocolitica O:9 OPS and OC in serum resistance. To examine the role of Y. enterocolitica O:9 LPS in serum resistance, the wild-type strain Ruokola/71, the pYV-negative strain Ruokola/71-c, and the LPS mutants, missing the OPS (YeO9-R1) or the OC (YeO9-OC) or expressing a reduced amount of OC (YeO9-OCP), were tested for the ability to resist alternative and classical complement pathway (AP and CP, respectively)-mediated killing (Table 1; Fig. 4).
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FIG. 4. Role of LPS phenotype in serum resistance of Y. enterocolitica O:9. Survival of bacteria in 66.7% NHS (CP/AP-killing bottom panel) and Mg-EGTA-treated serum (AP-killing, top panel) at 0.5- and 2-h time points. The columns indicate the mean survival percentage of the strain, and the bars indicate the ranges of standard errors. The filled columns show the results for the wild-type strain. In between the panels, the strains and their properties with respect to the presence of pYV (Yersinia virulence plasmid) and expression of OPS and OC are indicated. *, the AP killing results of YeO9-OC and YeO9-R1 at 2 h differed significantly (P < 0.001, Student's t test) from those of Ruokola/71.
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1,2-linked N-formylperosamine (4,6-dideoxy-4-formamido-D-mannopyranose) (24). In Yersinia spp. expressing heteropolymeric OPSs the OPS gene cluster is located between the hemH and gsk genes (63, 65, 66). In Y. enterocolitica serotypes O:3 and O:9, both encoding homopolymeric OPSs, the genomic locus between hemH and gsk genes is occupied by the OC gene cluster (63). We identified the O:9 OPS gene cluster located upstream from the gnd gene, similar to the OPS gene clusters of Salmonella and E. coli (12, 59) (Fig. 1). The gnd gene encodes gluconate-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, an enzyme not involved in the OPS biosynthesis. The O:9 gene cluster contains 12 genes. Based on sequence similarity and the predicted GDP-N-formylperosamine biosynthetic pathway (27, 33), manB, manC, gmd, per, and wbcV genes code for enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of GDP-N-formylperosamine, wbcU and wbcW code for N-formylperosaminyltransferases assembling the homopolymer onto undecaprenylphosphate carrier lipid, and wzm and wzt code for proteins for transporting the OPS homopolymer into periplasm. The putative pathway for the biosynthesis of the GDP-N-formylperosamine is given in Fig. 5. The WbcT protein is left without a function; therefore, it is likely that the functional assignments still need adjustments after biochemical evidence of the last steps of the pathway is found. The last step in the biosynthesis is shown to be the transfer of the formyl group by WbcV. However, it is not certain that the transfer of the formyl group takes place at the nucleotide sugar level; it could also take place after polymerization of OPS. Related to this, there is evidence for only one of the sugar nucleotides containing a formamido group, i.e., UDP-4-deoxy-4-formamido-L-arabinose (18, 72). In Y. enterocolitica O:9 the pathway could be verified either by identification of GDP-N-formylperosamine directly from bacterial cells or by characterization of the formyltransferase activity of WbcV in vitro.
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FIG. 5. Proposed biosynthesis pathway to GDP-N-formylperosamine in Y. enterocolitica O:9. The pathway up to GDP-4-keto-6-deoxy-D-mannose is identical to that of GDP-L-fucose biosynthesis; both Fcl (GDP-L-fucose synthetase) and Per (GDP-D-perosamine synthase) use this intermediate as a substrate.
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The OPS gene cluster also contains genes similar to galU and galF. These genes are involved in the synthesis of UDP-glucose and have no clear role in the OPS biosynthesis. Their presence in the OPS gene cluster was thus surprising. On the other hand, in Salmonella and E. coli the OPS gene clusters are usually located between the galF and gnd genes (12, 59). Our results showed that the galF mutation does not affect either the OPS synthesis or the viability of the bacterium. The galU gene, however, is essential for Y. enterocolitica O:9. Interestingly, in some bacteria galU mutants have been successfully constructed and displayed reduced virulence and resistance to antimicrobial agents (25, 32, 52).
Localization of the promoters of the OPS gene cluster. Sequence analysis revealed several putative promoters in the OPS gene cluster, one upstream of the entire cluster, in front of manC, and three intergenic promoters inside the cluster in front of the galU, gmd, and wzm genes. Experimental data identified promoter activity upstream of the galU, gmd and wzm genes. The presence of an active promoter upstream of the manC gene is also very likely. The upstream region of the manC gene in Y. enterocolitica O:9 (Fig. 1) contains a 346-bp fragment more than 92% identical to the fragment containing the experimentally verified tandem promoters of the OPS gene cluster in Y. enterocolitica O:3 (74) (nucleotides 440 to 786, accession no AJ605741, versus nucleotides 1497 to 1844, accession no. Z18920, respectively). In fact, this is the only region of significant sequence similarity between the O:9 and O:3 OPS gene clusters. This region contains the JUMP start sequence (40) typical for all surface polysaccharide biosynthesis gene clusters and thus also present in all OPS gene clusters of Yersinia studied to date (63). Although more-detailed characterization of the promoters and regulation of transcription is warranted, our data indicate that the O:9 OPS gene cluster is organized into four transcriptional units.
Serum resistance. The serum killing experiments confirmed the importance of pYV-encoded YadA in serum resistance of Y. enterocolitica O:9 (8). In contrast to serotype O:3 (14), however, O:9 LPS appears to play a clear role in serum resistance. Both OPS and OC protected Y. enterocolitica O:9 against complement killing (Fig. 4). The OPS seemed to provide long-term resistance to complement-mediated killing while OC was clearly more important at the early time point. The importance of long OPS chains in serum resistance has been shown in several studies (19, 35, 43). Long OPSs protect Salmonella and E. coli strains against insertion of the membrane attack complex into the membrane (44, 45). In Y. enterocolitica O:9, however, both OPS and OC seem to assist and strengthen the mainly YadA-dependent resistance against complement-mediated killing. Further work is warranted to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of this resistance.
Polymyxin B resistance. The OPSs provide a steric hindrance for the access of antimicrobial peptides to inner LPS targets (9, 30, 47, 67). The serotype O:9 OPS, however, similarly to that of serotype O:3 (67), plays a minor role in the polymyxin B resistance. Moreover, the resistance is apparent only in the absence of the OC. On the other hand, as rough mutants of other bacterial species containing perosamine in their OPSs are more sensitive to antimicrobial peptides than the wild-type strains (49, 52, 71), the lack of contribution of serotype O:9 OPS to polymyxin B resistance is not likely due to its chemical composition. The available evidence, in fact, suggests that OPSs from yersiniae do not play a significant role in the resistance to antimicrobial peptides (11, 67; also unpublished data).
Temperature-dependent resistance to antimicrobial peptides, however, seems to be a common feature of yersiniae (5, 10, 56; also unpublished data). Even though both OPS expression and resistance to antimicrobial peptides in yersiniae are highest at RT (1, 11), our data suggest that OPS cannot account for this phenotype. We are currently investigating whether temperature-induced lipid A modifications affect the resistance to antimicrobial peptides.
Concluding remarks. Isogenic OPS and OC mutants displayed decreased resistance to human serum complement and polymyxin B compared to the wild-type O:9 strain. Interestingly, the serum resistance phenotype, but not the polymyxin B resistance phenotype, differs from that of analogous OPS and OC mutants of serotype O:3 (3, 67). This points to different biological functions of the OPS and OC in serotypes O:3 and O:9. It is very likely that the chemical nature of the OPS may dictate the biological role that it plays in virulence. Since serotype O:9 strains more frequently infect animals than do serotype O:3 strains, one could further speculate that the LPS structures also influence the host preferences of the serotypes. Further studies are needed to address these questions.
We thank Tatiana Bogdanovich and Kirsten Vestergaard for excellent technical assistance.
Published ahead of print on 10 August 2007. ![]()
Present address: Bio Science and Technology, BioCentrum, Technical University of Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark. ![]()
Present address: Molecular Cancer Biology Program, 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland. ![]()
Present address: Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark. ![]()
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R1-37 is a tailed bacteriophage having a 270 kb DNA genome with thymidine replaced by deoxyuridine. Microbiology 151:4093-4102.This article has been cited by other articles:
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