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1.
J Biol Chem ; 276(37): 34862-70, 2001 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11461915

ABSTRACT

Flagellins from three strains of Campylobacter jejuni and one strain of Campylobacter coli were shown to be extensively modified by glycosyl residues, imparting an approximate 6000-Da shift from the molecular mass of the protein predicted from the DNA sequence. Tryptic peptides from C. jejuni 81-176 flagellin were subjected to capillary liquid chromatography-electrospray mass spectrometry with a high/low orifice stepping to identify peptide segments of aberrant masses together with their corresponding glycosyl appendages. These modified peptides were further characterized by tandem mass spectrometry and preparative high performance liquid chromatography followed by nano-NMR spectroscopy to identify the nature and precise site of glycosylation. These analyses have shown that there are 19 modified Ser/Thr residues in C. jejuni 81-176 flagellin. The predominant modification found on C. jejuni flagellin was O-linked 5,7-diacetamido-3,5,7,9-tetradeoxy-l-glycero-l-manno-nonulosonic acid (pseudaminic acid, Pse5Ac7Ac) with additional heterogeneity conferred by substitution of the acetamido groups with acetamidino and hydroxyproprionyl groups. In C. jejuni 81-176, the gene Cj1316c, encoding a protein of unknown function, was shown to be involved in the biosynthesis and/or the addition of the acetamidino group on Pse5Ac7Ac. Glycosylation is not random, since 19 of the total 107 Ser/Thr residues are modified, and all but one of these are restricted to the central, surface-exposed domain of flagellin when folded in the filament. The mechanism of attachment appears unrelated to a consensus peptide sequence but is rather based on surface accessibility of Ser/Thr residues in the folded protein.


Subject(s)
Campylobacter jejuni/chemistry , Flagellin/chemistry , Glycopeptides/analysis , Amino Acid Sequence , Glycosylation , Mass Spectrometry , Molecular Sequence Data
3.
Infect Immun ; 68(12): 6656-62, 2000 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11083778

ABSTRACT

Three genes involved in biosynthesis of the lipooligosaccharide (LOS) core of Campylobacter jejuni MSC57360, the type strain of the HS:1 serotype, whose structure mimics GM(2) ganglioside, have been cloned and characterized. Mutation of genes encoding proteins with homology to a sialyl transferase (cstII) and a putative N-acetylmannosamine synthetase (neuC1), part of the biosynthetic pathway of N-acetylneuraminic acid (NeuNAc), have identical phenotypes. The LOS cores of these mutants display identical changes in electrophoretic mobility, loss of reactivity with cholera toxin (CT), and enhanced immunoreactivity with a hyperimmune polyclonal antiserum generated against whole cells of C. jejuni MSC57360. Loss of sialic acid in the core of the neuC1 mutant was confirmed by fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry. Mutation of a gene encoding a putative beta-1,4-N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase (Cgt) resulted in LOS cores intermediate in electrophoretic mobility between that of wild type and the mutants lacking NeuNAc, loss of reactivity with CT, and a reduced immunoreactivity with hyperimmune antiserum. Chemical analyses confirmed the loss of N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) and the presence of NeuNAc in the cgt mutant. These data suggest that the Cgt enzyme is capable of transferring GalNAc to an acceptor with or without NeuNAc and that the Cst enzyme is capable of transferring NeuNAc to an acceptor with or without GalNAc. A mutant with a nonsialylated LOS core is more sensitive to the bactericidal effects of human sera than the wild type or the mutant lacking GalNAc.


Subject(s)
Blood Bactericidal Activity , Campylobacter jejuni/immunology , Lipopolysaccharides/chemistry , N-Acetylneuraminic Acid/metabolism , Animals , Campylobacter jejuni/pathogenicity , Flagellin/genetics , Mutagenesis, Insertional , Open Reading Frames , Rabbits
4.
Infect Immun ; 68(8): 4384-90, 2000 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10899834

ABSTRACT

Campylobacter jejuni strain 81-176 contains two, previously undescribed plasmids, each of which is approximately 35 kb in size. Although one of the plasmids, termed pTet, carries a tetO gene, conjugative transfer of tetracycline resistance to another strain of C. jejuni could not be demonstrated. Partial sequence analysis of the second plasmid, pVir, revealed the presence of four open reading frames which encode proteins with significant sequence similarity to Helicobacter pylori proteins, including one encoded by the cag pathogenicity island. All four of these plasmid-encoded proteins show some level of homology to components of type IV secretion systems. Mutation of one of these plasmid genes, comB3, reduced both adherence to and invasion of INT407 cells to approximately one-third that seen with wild-type strain 81-176. Mutation of comB3 also reduced the natural transformation frequency. A mutation in a second plasmid gene, a virB11 homolog, resulted in a 6-fold reduction in adherence and an 11-fold reduction in invasion compared to the wild type. The isogenic virB11 mutant of strain 81-176 also demonstrated significantly reduced virulence in the ferret diarrheal disease model. The virB11 homolog was detected on plasmids in 6 out of 58 fresh clinical isolates of C. jejuni, suggesting that plasmids are involved in the virulence of a subset of C. jejuni pathogens.


Subject(s)
Campylobacter jejuni/pathogenicity , Plasmids/genetics , Virulence Factors , Animals , Bacterial Adhesion , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Conjugation, Genetic , Diarrhea , Female , Ferrets , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Insertional , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Open Reading Frames , R Factors/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity , Tetracycline Resistance/genetics , Transformation, Bacterial
5.
Infect Immun ; 67(11): 5799-805, 1999 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10531231

ABSTRACT

A recombinant protein comprising the maltose-binding protein (MBP) of Escherichia coli fused to amino acids 5 to 337 of the FlaA flagellin of Campylobacter coli VC167 was evaluated for immunogenicity and protective efficacy against challenge by a heterologous strain of campylobacter, Campylobacter jejuni 81-176, in two murine models. The sequence of the flaA gene of strain 81-176 revealed a predicted protein which was 98.1% similar to that of VC167 FlaA over the region expressed in the fusion protein. Mice were immunized intranasally with two doses of 3 to 50 microgram of MBP-FlaA, given 8 days apart, with or without 5 microgram of the mutant E. coli heat-labile enterotoxin (LT(R192G)) as a mucosal adjuvant. The full range of MBP-FlaA doses were effective in eliciting antigen-specific serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) responses, and these responses were enhanced by adjuvant use, except in the highest dosing group. Stimulation of FlaA-specific intestinal secretory IgA (sIgA) responses required immunization with higher doses of MBP-FlaA (>/=25 microgram) or coadministration of lower doses with the adjuvant. When vaccinated mice were challenged intranasally 26 days after immunization, the best protection was seen in animals given 50 microgram of MBP-FlaA plus LT(R192G). The protective efficacies of this dose against disease symptoms and intestinal colonization were 81.1 and 84%, respectively. When mice which had been immunized with 50 microgram of MBP-FlaA plus LT(R192G) intranasally were challenged orally with 8 x 10(10), 8 x 10(9), or 8 x 10(8) cells of strain 81-176, the protective efficacies against intestinal colonization at 7 days postinfection were 71.4, 71.4, and 100%, respectively.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Vaccines/immunology , Campylobacter jejuni/immunology , Flagellin/immunology , Peptide Fragments/immunology , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/immunology , Vaccines, Synthetic/immunology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Flagellin/chemistry , Humans , Immunization , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Molecular Sequence Data
6.
Mol Microbiol ; 32(5): 1022-30, 1999 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10361304

ABSTRACT

A genetic locus from Campylobacter jejuni 81-176 (O:23, 36) has been characterized that appears to be involved in glycosylation of multiple proteins, including flagellin. The lipopolysaccharide (LPS) core of Escherichia coli DH5alpha containing some of these genes is modified such that it becomes immunoreactive with O:23 and O:36 antisera and loses reactivity with the lectin wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). Site-specific mutation of one of these genes in the E. coli host causes loss of O:23 and O:36 antibody reactivity and restores reactivity with WGA. However, site-specific mutation of each of the seven genes in 81-176 failed to show any detectable changes in LPS. Multiple proteins from various cellular fractions of each mutant showed altered reactivity by Western blot analyses using O:23 and O:36 antisera. The changes in protein antigenicity could be restored in one of the mutants by the presence of the corresponding wild-type allele in trans on a shuttle vector. Flagellin, which is known to be a glycoprotein, was one of the proteins that showed altered reactivity with O:23 and O:36 antiserum in the mutants. Chemical deglycosylation of protein fractions from the 81-176 wild type suggests that the other proteins with altered antigenicity in the mutants are also glycosylated.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Campylobacter jejuni/genetics , Campylobacter jejuni/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Antigens, Bacterial/immunology , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/immunology , Campylobacter jejuni/immunology , DNA, Bacterial/chemistry , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Flagellin/genetics , Flagellin/metabolism , Genes, Bacterial , Glycosylation , Immunoblotting , Lipopolysaccharides/immunology , Lipopolysaccharides/isolation & purification , Lipopolysaccharides/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/immunology , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Plasmids/genetics , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Wheat Germ Agglutinins/metabolism
7.
Infect Immun ; 67(1): 88-93, 1999 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9864200

ABSTRACT

Incubation of INT407 cells with various clinical isolates of Campylobacter jejuni resulted in secretion of interleukin-8 (IL-8) at levels ranging from 96 to 554 pg/ml at 24 h. The strains which produced the highest levels of IL-8 secretion were 81-176 and BT44. Induction of IL-8 secretion required live cells of 81-176 and was dependent on de novo protein synthesis. Site-specific mutants of 81-176, which were previously shown to be defective in adherence and invasion, resulted in reduced levels of secretion of IL-8, and cheY mutants of strains 81-176 and 749, which are hyperadherent and hyperinvasive, resulted in higher levels of IL-8 secretion. Another mutant of 81-176, which adheres at about 43% of the wild-type levels but is noninvasive, also showed marked reduction in IL-8 levels, suggesting that invasion is necessary for high levels of IL-8 secretion. When gentamicin was added to INT407 cells at 2 h after infection with 81-176, IL-8 secretion 22 h later was equivalent to that of controls without gentamicin, suggesting that the events which trigger induction and release of IL-8 occur early in the interactions of bacteria and eukaryotic cells.


Subject(s)
Campylobacter jejuni/immunology , Interleukin-8/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/microbiology , Bacterial Adhesion/immunology , Campylobacter jejuni/growth & development , Campylobacter jejuni/pathogenicity , Cell Line , Chemotaxis/immunology , Colony Count, Microbial , Embryo, Mammalian , Gentamicins/pharmacology , Humans , Interleukin-8/biosynthesis , Intestinal Mucosa/cytology , Kinetics , Microbial Sensitivity Tests
9.
J Parasitol ; 77(3): 493-5, 1991 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2040963

ABSTRACT

Lone star ticks, Amblyomma americanum comprised a significantly greater proportion of total ticks flagged on eastern Long Island and Fire Island, New York, in 1986 and 1990 than in samples reported by other authors from the 1940s (when A. americanum was not collected by flagging or from hosts) and the 1970s. Therefore, population densities of A. americanum apparently have increased in recent years on southeastern Long Island, where this species now is distributed widely.


Subject(s)
Ticks/growth & development , Animals , New York , Population Density
10.
Exp Appl Acarol ; 7(4): 313-22, 1989 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2806016

ABSTRACT

Ticks were sampled by flagging, collecting from the investigator's clothing (walking samples), trapping with dry-ice bait, and collecting from mammal hosts on Fire Island, NY, U.S.A. The habitat distribution of adult deer ticks, Ixodes dammini, was the same in simultaneous collections from the investigator's clothing and from muslin flags. Walking and flagging samples can both be biased by differences between investigators, so the same person should do comparative samples whenever possible. Walking samples probably give a more accurate estimate than flagging samples of the human risk of encountering ticks. However, ticks (such as immature I. dammini) that seek hosts in leaf litter and ground-level vegetation are poorly sampled by walking collections. These ticks can be sampled by flagging at ground level. Dry-ice-baited tick-traps caught far more lone-star ticks, Amblyomma americanum, than deer ticks, even in areas where deer ticks predominated in flagging samples. In comparisons of tick mobility in the lab, nymphal A. americanum were more mobile than nymphal I. dammini in 84% of the trials. Therefore, the trapping bias may result from increased trap encounter due to more rapid movement by A. americanum, although greater attraction to carbon dioxide may also play a role. Tick traps are useful for intraspecific between-habitat comparisons. Early in their seasonal activity period, larval I. dammini were better represented in collections from mouse hosts than in flagging samples. Apparently, sampling from favored hosts can detect ticks at low population levels, but often cannot be used to get accurate estimates of pathogen prevalence in questing ticks.


Subject(s)
Parasitology/methods , Ticks , Animals , Humans , Ticks/physiology
11.
J Med Entomol ; 26(3): 183-9, 1989 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2724316

ABSTRACT

The distributions of Ixodes dammini Spielman, Clifford, Piesman, and Corwin and Lyme disease spirochetes were studied on Fire Island, N.Y. Adult ticks were more common in high-shrub habitats (shrubby vegetation greater than or equal to 1 m high) than in grassy and lowshrub habitats (vegetation less than 1 m) in spring and fall. In the fall, adults were also common in the woods. Adults were more abundant on narrow trails than in nearby vegetation. During the summer, questing nymphs and larvae were far more common in the woods (primarily in leaf litter) than in open grass-shrub habitats. In contrast, the number of nymphs and larvae per white-footed mouse did not differ among habitats, suggesting that mice play a role in tick dispersal. CO2 trap captures of nymphs on trails were not significantly greater than off trails. Most collections of larvae and nymphs had more than one tick, whereas most samples of adults had only one individual. Borrelia burgdorferi infection rates in free-living ticks were 38% (n = 12) to 50% (n = 32) in adults, 32% in nymphs (n = 184), and 0% in larvae (n = 15). The proportion of ticks infected did not differ significantly among habitats. Therefore, during the spring and fall, activities that take place in high-shrub areas or in the woods (e.g., landscaping, trail or brush clearing) involve a high risk of exposure to adult ticks infected with Lyme disease. In late spring to early summer, any activity involving close contact with leaf litter (e.g., playing in the leaves, gathering leaves for camp bedding) results in a high risk of exposure to infected nymphs.


Subject(s)
Arachnid Vectors/physiology , Borrelia/physiology , Ticks/physiology , Animals , Arachnid Vectors/microbiology , Female , Larva , Male , New York , Nymph , Peromyscus , Ticks/microbiology
14.
Prev Hum Serv ; 5(2): 241-77, 1987.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10285530

ABSTRACT

One of the most important functions of law and the legal system is to prevent harm by regulating conduct prospectively. Almost all law--whether in the form of a statute enacted by a legislative body or a judgment decreed by a court--is designed, at least in part, to avoid some socially undesirable future state of affairs. This chapter explores some of the more significant ways in which lawmaking (both legislative and judicial) may be regarded as a form of prevention and the legal system may be used for prevention in the public interest. Although the chapter focuses on litigation and legislation of particular interest to those in the fields of mental health and mental retardation, the legal processes and principles described extend to many other areas of law with implications for promoting health and preventing harm.


Subject(s)
Civil Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , California , Intellectual Disability , Maine , Mental Health , Social Change , United States
15.
Am J Law Med ; 8(4): 407-28, 1983.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6859049

ABSTRACT

Psychiatric and psychological predictions of dangerousness are used in a number of American jurisdictions to convince a judge or jury that a convicted murderer should be sentenced to death. Empirical research has demonstrated, however, that psychiatric and psychological predictions of dangerousness generally are inaccurate. This Article describes the current use of such predictions in capital sentencing hearings and examines their status under existing professional codes of ethics. It argues that the rendering of these predictions by psychiatrists and psychologists is contrary to the scientific and healing traditions of their professions and urges psychiatrists and psychologists to adopt an ethical ban on predictions of dangerousness in the capital sentencing context.


Subject(s)
Capital Punishment/legislation & jurisprudence , Codes of Ethics , Dangerous Behavior , Ethics, Professional , Forensic Psychiatry , Violence , Expert Testimony/legislation & jurisprudence , Homicide , Humans , Supreme Court Decisions
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