Complement-mediated lipopolysaccharide release and outer membrane damage in Escherichia coli J5: requirement for C9: Requirement for C9

AM O'Hara, AP Moran, R Wurzner, A Orren, Ann Ryan

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    23 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are major antigenic components of the outer membrane of Gramnegative bacteria and can stimulate activation of the complement system. Such activation leads to formation of the complement membrane attack complex (MAC) on the cell walls, LPS release and, in serum-sensitive strains, to cell death. In this study, Escherichia coli J5 strains. which incorporate exogenous galactose exclusively into LPS, were used to generate target strains with different LPS chemotypes, and the LPS of the strains was labelled with tritium (H-3-LPS). The ability of normal human serum (NHS and human complement-deficient sera to release LPS was subsequently monitored. NHS-induced release of 64-95.7% of H-3-LPS within 30 min. overall, no significant difference was observed between release of LPS from E. coli J5 strains with different LPS chemotypes. In Functional assays, maximum LPS release had occurred by 30 min and before maximum bacterial killing. Electron microscopy revealed NHS-induced outer-membrane disruption in the form of blebs at 15 min; at this time-point the inner membrane remained intact. Background LPS release and no bactericidal activity were detected in heat-inactivated serum or human sera deficient in C6, C7 or C8. The C9-deficient (C9D) serum had low bactericidal activity and failed to induce LPS release; however, addition of purified human C9 reconstituted its ability to release LPS. This study demonstrated the need for Functional C9 molecules for LPS-releasing activities in serum-sensitive E. coli J5 strains.
    Original languageUndefined/Unknown
    Pages (from-to)365-372
    Number of pages8
    JournalImmunology
    Volume102
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2001

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