13 research outputs found

    Swine influenza virus strains recognize sialylsugar chains containing the molecular species of sialic acid predominantly present in the swine tracheal epithelium

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    AbstractWe determined the ratio of N-glycolylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc) to N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac) in swine respiratory epithelia by fluorometric high-performance liquid chromatography, and examined the binding specificity of swine influenza virus strains for gangliosides containing different molecular species of sialic acid (Neu5Ac and Neu5Gc), and for bovine erythrocyte sialoglycoprotein 2 (GP-2) containing Neu5Gc as its predominate sialic acid (96% of total sialic acids). The presence of Neu5Gc, which had not been detected in human tracheal epithelia, and Neu5Ac in swine tracheal epithelia was observed in a 1:1 ratio. The swine influenza virus H1 and H3 isolates tested, except for A/swine/Iowa/15/30 (H1N1), displayed a marked binding ability for sialylsugar chains containing Neu5Gc compared with that of the human influenza virus strains. These results suggest that swine influenza viruses recognize sialylsugar chains containing the molecular species of sialic acid present predominantly in the swine tracheal epithelium.© 1997 Federation of European Biochemical Societies

    Restricted Expression of Shiga Toxin Binding Sites on Mucosal Epithelium of Mouse Distal Colon

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    Shiga toxins (Stx) are some of the major virulence factors of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli strains such as serotype O157:H7. To explore how Stx might initially gain access to the bloodstream from sites of infection, frozen sections of mouse colon were immunohistochemically examined for binding sites for recombinant binding subunits (Stx1B). Binding sites were selectively expressed on the epithelium in the distal half of the mouse colon, whereas the proximal half did not exhibit any binding sites. In agreement with this observation, we also demonstrated the distal-part-restricted distribution of glycolipids that bind to Stx1B in the mouse colon. For comparison, the binding sites of several control lectins were also examined. Selective binding to the distal part of the colon was not seen with any other control lectins, including Griffonia simplicifolia lectin-I isolectin B4 (GS-I-B4), which shares α-galactose specificity with Stx1B. Partial overlapping of the specificities of Stx1B and GS-I-B4 was seen by assay with globotriose-conjugated multivalent ligands. The results indicate that Stx1B is stricter in the recognition of carbohydrate determinants than GS-I-B4 when examined with biological ligands
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