1. Evidence for covalent attachment of phospholipid to the capsular polysaccharide of Haemophilus influenzae type b.
- Author
-
Kuo JS, Doelling VW, Graveline JF, and McCoy DW
- Subjects
- Carbon Radioisotopes, Kinetics, Palmitic Acid, Palmitic Acids metabolism, Phospholipases A metabolism, Phospholipases A2, Polysaccharides isolation & purification, Ribose metabolism, Tritium, Haemophilus influenzae metabolism, Phospholipids metabolism, Polysaccharides biosynthesis
- Abstract
Cells of Haemophilus influenzae type b were grown in a liquid medium containing [3H]palmitate or [14C]ribose or both for two generations of exponential growth. Radiolabeled type-specific capsular polysaccharide, polyribosyl ribitol phosphate (PRP), was purified from the culture supernatant by Cetavlon precipitation, ethanol fractionation, and hydroxylapatite and Sepharose 4B chromatography. The doubly labeled ( [3H]palmitate and [14C]ribose) PRP preparation was found to coelute in a single peak from a Sepharose 4B column, suggesting that both precursors were incorporated into the purified PRP. A singly labeled ( [3H]palmitate) purified PRP preparation was found to be quantitatively immune precipitated by human serum containing antibody against PRP. The radioactivity of this preparation could not be dissociated from PRP by treatment with chloroform-methanol, 6 M urea, sodium dodecyl sulfate, or Zwittergent. Only after acid, alkaline, or phospholipase A2 treatment of PRP labeled with [3H]palmitate or [3H]palmitate and [14C]ribose followed by chloroform-methanol extraction could most of the 3H-radioactivity be recovered in the organic phase. The chloroform-soluble acid-hydrolyzed or phospholipase A2-treated product was identified as palmitic acid after thin-layer chromatography. These results strongly suggest that a phospholipid moiety is covalently associated with the H. influenzae type b polysaccharide PRP.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF