Model of a Mycoplasma Cell

Author(s):  
D.S. Goodsell
Keyword(s):  
1976 ◽  
Vol 77 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. E. Yaguzhinskaya

SummaryThe contamination of mycoplasma cell preparations by serum proteins originating from culture medium was studied.A. laidlawiiandM. arthritidiscells were grown in the presence of [14C]-aminoacids, and the cells were washed with 0·9% NaCl by threefold centrifugation. Total proteins of the washed cells were analysed by SDS gel electrophoresis. Coomassie-stained electrophoretic patterns were compared with autoradiographs of the same gels. The stained electrophoretic pattern of washedA. laidlawiigrown without serum was identical with autoradiographs of the same cells grown without or with serum. That of washedA. laidlawiigrown with serum differed from the corresponding autoradiograph by the presence of extra protein bands I, II, III, and IV with molecular weights of over 160,000, 80,000–87,000, 55,000 and 25,000, respectively. The same extra bands were found in stained electrophoretic patterns of washed: (a)A. laidlawiicells grown without serum and mixed with serum in the stationary phase, (b)M. arthritidiscells, as compared with their autoradiographs, (c) serum precipitate. The bands III and IV may be due to the heavy and light chains of γ-globulin, the band II might belong to transferrin or to some component of complement. Acidification of serum to pH 5 brought about 100-fold rise of amount of serum precipitate, the number of bands in the electrophoretic pattern of the precipitate being also increased. Stained electrophoretic patterns of cells purified by twofold centrifugation in step sucrose density gradient (1·20–1·27 g./cm.3forA. laidlawii,and 1·15–1·25 forM. arthritidis) contained no extra bands and matched completely with their autoradiographs.It was concluded that contamination of washed mycoplasma cells by serum proteins is mainly due to co-precipitation of aggregated serum proteins together with cells during centrifugation rather than to adsorption of serum proteins on the cell surface.


1985 ◽  
Vol 242 (2) ◽  
pp. 342-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Louis Rigaud ◽  
Daniel Lajeunesse ◽  
Christian Le Grimellec

1976 ◽  
Vol 455 (3) ◽  
pp. 876-888 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Rottem ◽  
M.C. Hardegree ◽  
M.W. Grabowski ◽  
R. Fornwald ◽  
M.F. Barile

2021 ◽  
pp. 167351
Author(s):  
Martina Maritan ◽  
Ludovic Autin ◽  
Jonathan Karr ◽  
Markus W. Covert ◽  
Arthur J. Olson ◽  
...  

Cell ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amit Ghosh ◽  
Jack Maniloff ◽  
David A. Gerling

2004 ◽  
Vol 72 (12) ◽  
pp. 6846-6851 ◽  
Author(s):  
Warren L. Simmons ◽  
Amy M. Denison ◽  
Kevin Dybvig

ABSTRACT The Vsa proteins are associated with the virulence of the murine respiratory pathogen Mycoplasma pulmonis. The antigens consist of a conserved N-terminal region that is combined with one of several different variable C-terminal regions comprised of tandem repeats. M. pulmonis strains that produce VsaA with about 40 tandem repeats do not adhere to polystyrene or erythrocytes and are highly resistant to complement killing. Strains that produce VsaA with three tandem repeats adhere strongly to polystyrene and erythrocytes and are highly susceptible to complement killing. We report here that the resistance to complement lysis was not due to a lack of activation of the complement cascade. Isolation and analysis of M. pulmonis strains that produced Vsa proteins other than VsaA (VsaG and VsaI) with either long or short repeat regions indicated that adherence to polystyrene and resistance to complement were dependent on the length of the repeat region but not on the Vsa type. Furthermore, M. pulmonis Vsa variants were susceptible to the polypeptide pore-forming molecule gramicidin D, independent of the Vsa type and length. Collectively, the data indicate the Vsa proteins nonspecifically mediate M. pulmonis surface interactions and function to sterically hinder access of complement to the mycoplasma cell membrane while permitting access of smaller molecules.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan D. Kornspan ◽  
Shlomo Rottem

Thede novosynthesized polar lipids ofMycoplasmaspecies are rather simple, comprising primarily of the acidic glycerophospholipids PG and CL. In addition, when grown in a medium containing serum, significant amounts of PC and SPM are incorporated into the mycoplasma cell membrane although these lipids are very uncommon in wall-covered bacteria. The exogenous lipids are either incorporated unchanged or the PC incorporated is modified by a deacylation-acylation enzymatic cycle to form disaturated PC. Although their small genome, in someMycoplasmaspecies, other genes involved in lipid biosynthesis were detected, resulting in the synthesis of a variety of glycolipis, phosphoglycolipids and ether lipids. We suggest that analyses and comparisons of mycoplasma polar lipids may serve as a novel and useful tool for classification. Nonetheless, to evaluate the importance of polar lipids in mycoplasma, further systematic and extensive studies on moreMycoplasmaspecies are needed. While studies are needed to elucidate the role of lipids in the mechanisms governing the interaction of mycoplasmas with host eukaryotic cells, the finding that a terminal phosphocholine containing glycolipids ofM. fermentansserves both as a major immune determinants and as a trigger of the inflammatory responses, and the findings that the fusogenicity ofM. fermentanswith host cells is markedly stimulated by lyso-ether lipids, are important steps toward understanding the molecular mechanisms ofM. fermentanspathogenicity.


2006 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 468-474 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lina Fassi Fehri ◽  
Henri Wróblewski ◽  
Alain Blanchard

ABSTRACT We showed in a previous study that associations of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), which are key components of the innate immune systems of all living species, with the fluoroquinolone enrofloxacin can successfully cure HeLa cell cultures of Mycoplasma fermentans and M. hyorhinis contamination. In the present work, the in vitro susceptibility of M. pulmonis, a murine pathogen, to enrofloxacin and four AMPs (alamethicin, globomycin, gramicidin S, and surfactin) was investigated, with special reference to synergistic associations and the effect of the mycoplasma cell concentration. Enrofloxacin and globomycin displayed the lowest MICs (0.4 μM), followed by gramicidin S (3.12 μM), alamethicin (6.25 μM), and surfactin (25 μM). When the mycoplasma cell concentration was varied from 104 to 108 CFU/ml, the MICs of enrofloxacin and globomycin increased while those of the three other molecules remained essentially constant. The minimal bactericidal concentration of enrofloxacin (0.8 μM) was also lower than those of the peptides (6.25 to 100 μM), but the latter killed the mycoplasma cells much faster than enrofloxacin (2 h versus 1 day). The use of the AMPs in association with enrofloxacin revealed synergistic effects with alamethicin and surfactin. Interestingly, the mycoplasma-killing activities of the two combinations enrofloxacin (MIC/2) plus alamethicin (MIC/4) and enrofloxacin (MIC/2) plus surfactin (MIC/16) were about 2 orders of magnitude higher than those of the three molecules used separately. These results support the interest devoted to AMPs as a novel class of antimicrobial agents and pinpoint their ability to potentiate the activities of conventional antibiotics, such as fluoroquinolones.


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