35 resultados para Mycobacterium bovis - Teses


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The mycobacterial cell wall contains large amounts of unusual lipids, including mycolic acids that are covalently linked to the underlying arabinogalactan-peptidoglycan complex. Hydrocarbon chains of much of these lipids have been shown to be packed in a direction perpendicular to the plane of the cell surface. In this study, we examined the dynamic properties of the organized lipid domains in the cell wall isolated from Mycobacterium chelonae grown at 30 degrees C. Differential scanning calorimetry showed that much of the lipids underwent major thermal transitions between 30 degree C and 65 degrees C, that is at temperatures above the growth temperature, a result suggesting that a significant portion of the lipids existed in a structure of extremely low fluidity in the growing cells. Spin-labeled fatty acid probes were successfully inserted into the more fluid part of the cell wall. Our model of the cell wall suggests that this domain corresponds to the outermost leaflet, a conclusion reinforced by the observation that labeling of intact cells produced electron spin resonance spectra similar to those of the isolated cell wall. Use of stearate labeled at different positions showed that the fluidity within the outer leaflet increased only slightly as the nitroxide group was placed farther away from the surface. These results are consistent with the model of mycobacterial cell wall containing an asymmetric lipid bilayer, with an internal, less fluid mycolic acid leaflet and an external, more fluid leaflet composed of lipids containing shorter chain fatty acids. The presence of the low-fluidity layer will lower the permeability of the cell wall to lipophilic antibiotics and chemotherapeutic agents and may contribute to the well-known intrinsic resistance of mycobacteria to such compounds.

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Tuberculosis continues to be responsible for the deaths of millions of people, yet the virulence factors of the causative pathogens remain unknown. Genetic complementation experiments with strains of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex have identified a gene from a virulent strain that restores virulence to an attenuated strain. The gene, designated rpoV, has a high degree of homology with principal transcription or sigma factors from other bacteria, particularly Mycobacterium smegmatis and Streptomyces griseus. The homologous rpoV gene of the attenuated strain has a point mutation causing an arginine-->histidine change in a domain known to interact with promoters. To our knowledge, association of loss of bacterial virulence with a mutation in the principal sigma factor has not been previously reported. The results indicate either that tuberculosis organisms have an alternative principal sigma factor that promotes virulence genes or, more probably, that this particular mutant principal sigma factor is unable to promote expression of one or more genes required for virulence. Study of genes and proteins differentially regulated by the mutant transcription factor should facilitate identification of further virulence factors.

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Mycolic acids represent a major constituent of the mycobacterial cell wall complex, which provides the first line of defense against potentially lethal environmental conditions. Slow-growing pathogenic mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis modify their mycolic acids by cyclopropanation, whereas fast-growing saprophytic species such as Mycobacterium smegmatis do not, suggesting that this modification may be associated with an increase in oxidative stress experienced by the slow-growing species. We have demonstrated the transformation of the distal cis double bond in the major mycolic acid of M. smegmatis to a cis-cyclopropane ring upon introduction of cosmid DNA from M. tuberculosis. This activity was localized to a single gene (cma1) encoding a protein that was 34% identical to the cyclopropane fatty acid synthase from Escherichia coli. Adjacent regions of the DNA sequence encode open reading frames that display homology to other fatty acid biosynthetic enzymes, indicating that some of the genes required for mycolic acid biosynthesis may be clustered in this region. M. smegmatis overexpressing the cma1 gene product significantly resist killing by hydrogen peroxide, suggesting that this modification may be an important adaptation of slow-growing mycobacteria to oxidative stress.

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The incidence of tuberculosis is increasing on a global scale, in part due to its strong association with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Attachment of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to its host cell, the alveolar macrophage (AM), is an important early step in the pathogenesis of infection. Bronchoalveolar lavage of HIV-infected individuals demonstrated the presence of a factor which significantly enhances the attachment of tubercle bacilli to AMs 3-fold relative to a normal control population. This factor is surfactant protein A (SP-A). SP-A levels are increased in the lungs of HIV-infected individuals. SP-A levels and attachment of M. tuberculosis to AMs inversely correlate with peripheral blood CD4 lymphocyte counts. Elevated concentrations of SP-A during the progression of HIV infection may represent an important nonimmune risk factor for acquiring tuberculosis, even before significant depletion of CD4 lymphocytes in the peripheral blood occurs.

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the primary agent of tuberculosis, must acquire iron from the host to cause infection. To do so, it releases high-affinity iron-binding siderophores called exochelins. Exochelins are thought to transfer iron to another type of high-affinity iron-binding molecule in the bacterial cell wall, mycobactins, for subsequent utilization by the bacterium. In this paper, we describe the purification of exochelins of M. tuberculosis and their characterization by mass spectrometry. Exochelins comprise a family of molecules whose most abundant species range in mass from 744 to 800 Da in the neutral Fe(3+)-loaded state. The molecules form two 14-Da-increment series, one saturated and the other unsaturated, with the increments reflecting different numbers of CH2 groups on a side chain. These series further subdivide into serine- or threonine-containing species. The virulent M. tuberculosis Erdman strain and the avirulent M. tuberculosis H37Ra strain produce a similar set of exochelins. Based on a comparison of their tandem mass spectra, exochelins share a common core structure with mycobactins. However, exochelins are smaller than mycobactins due to a shorter alkyl side chain, and the side chain of exochelins terminates in a methyl ester. These differences render exochelins more polar than the lipophilic mycobactins and hence soluble in the aqueous extracellular milieu of the bacterium in which they bind iron in the host.