148 research outputs found

    Production and secretion of collagen-binding proteins from Aeromonas veronii

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    Collagen-binding protein (CNBP) synthesized by Aeromonas veronii is located conserved within the subcellular fraction. The results of this study show that 98% of the total CNBP produced by Aer. veronii is present in the extracellular medium, and that the remaining CNBP is distributed either on the cell surface, within the periplasm or anchored on the outer membrane. CNBP is specifically secreted from Aer. veronii into the culture medium, because all the -lactamase activity was located in the cells and could be released by polymixin B extraction of periplasmic proteins. CNBP was produced at growth temperatures from 12 °C to 42 °C, but not at 4 °C. The findings indicate that the level of CNBP in the medium increases during the exponential growth phase and reaches a maximum during the early stationary phase. There was less CNBP production in poor nutrient MMB medium than in the rich LB nutrient medium. CNBP secretion, in contrast to aerolysin secretion, was unaffected by the exeA mutation of Aer. hydrophila. It is concluded that CNBP secretion from Aer. veronii must be achieved by a mechanism different from that reported for aerolysin secretion

    The Murid Herpesvirus-4 gH/gL Binds to Glycosaminoglycans

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    The first contact a virus makes with cells is an important determinant of its tropism. Murid Herpesvirus-4 (MuHV-4) is highly dependent on glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) for cell binding. Its first contact is therefore likely to involve a GAG-binding virion glycoprotein. We have previously identified two such proteins, gp70 and gp150. Gp70 binds strongly to GAGs. However, deleting it makes little difference to MuHV-4 cell binding or GAG-dependence. Deleting gp150, by contrast, frees MuHV-4 from GAG dependence. This implies that GAGs normally displace gp150 to allow GAG-independent cell binding. But the gp150 GAG interaction is weak, and so would seem unlikely to make an effective first contact. Since neither gp70 nor gp150 matches the expected profile of a first contact glycoprotein, our understanding of MuHV-4 GAG interactions must be incomplete. Here we relate the seemingly disconnected gp70 and gp150 GAG interactions by showing that the MuHV-4 gH/gL also binds to GAGs. gH/gL-blocking and gp70-blocking antibodies individually had little effect on cell binding, but together were strongly inhibitory. Thus, there was redundancy in GAG binding between gp70 and gH/gL. Gp150-deficient MuHV-4 largely resisted blocks to gp70 and gH/gL binding, consistent with its GAG independence. The failure of wild-type MuHV-4 to do the same argues that gp150 is normally engaged only down-stream of gp70 or gH/gL. MuHV-4 GAG dependence is consequently two-fold: gp70 or gH/gL binding provides virions with a vital first foothold, and gp150 is then engaged to reveal GAG-independent binding
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