Physiology And Biochemistry

Enterobacterial common antigen and O-specific polysaccharide coexist in the lipopolysaccharide of Yersinia enterocolitica serotype O : 3

  • 1Department of Microbiology, University of Silesia, Katowice, Poland
  • 2Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, Haartman Institute, Research Programs Unit, Immunobiology, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
  • 3Division of Structural Biochemistry, Research Center Borstel, Leibniz-Center for Medicine and Biosciences, Airway Research Center North (ARCN), Member of the German Center for Lung Research (DZL), Borstel, Germany
  • 4Helsinki University Central Hospital Laboratory Diagnostics, Helsinki, Finland
  • Correspondence
    Mikael Skurnik mikael.skurnik{at}helsinki.fi
  • Microbiology 2013; 159(Pt 8):1782–1793 · https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.066662-0

    View at publisher PubMed

    Abstract

    Yersinia enterocolitica serotype O : 3 produces two types of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) molecules to its surface. In both types the lipid A (LA) structure is substituted by inner core (IC) octasaccharide to which either outer core (OC) hexasaccharide or homopolymeric O-polysaccharide (OPS) is linked. In addition, enterobacterial common antigen (ECA) can be covalently linked to LPS, however, via an unknown linkage. To elucidate the relationship between ECA and LPS in Y. enterocolitica O : 3 and the effect of temperature on their expression, LPS was isolated from bacteria grown at 22 °C and 37 °C by consequent hot phenol/water and phenol-chloroform-light petroleum extractions to obtain LPS preparations free of ECA linked to glycerophospholipid. In immunoblotting, monoclonal antibodies TomA6 and 898, specific for OPS and ECA, respectively, reacted both with ladder-like bands and with a slower-migrating smear suggesting that the ECA and OPS epitopes coexist on the same molecules. These results were supported by immunoblotting with a monovalent Y. enterocolitica O : 3 ECA-specific rabbit antiserum. Also, two or three 898-positive (and monovalent-positive) TomA6-negative bands migrated at the level of the LA–IC band in LPS samples from certain OC mutants, most likely representing LA–IC molecules carrying 1–3 ECA repeat units but no OPS. These bands were also present in Y. enterocolitica O : 9 OC mutants; however, coexistence of ECA and OPS in the same molecules could not be detected. Finally, the LA–IC–ECA bands were missing from LPS of bacteria grown at 37 °C and also the general reduction in wild-type bacteria of ECA-specific monovalent-reactive material at 37 °C suggested that temperature regulates the expression of ECA. Indeed, RNA-sequencing analysis showed significant downregulation of the ECA biosynthetic gene cluster at 37 °C.

    • Edited by: V. Cid

    Abbreviations:
    ECA
    enterobacterial common antigen
    ECACYC
    enterobacterial common antigen in a cyclic form without a lipid anchor
    ECALPS
    enterobacterial common antigen anchored to the outer membrane via its LPS core oligosaccharide
    ECAPG
    enterobacterial common antigen anchored to the outer membrane via its l-glycerophospholipid
    FPKM
    fragments per kilobase of gene per million aligned fragments
    GlcN
    2-amino-2-deoxy-d-glucopyranose
    HMM
    high molecular mass
    IC
    inner core
    Kdo
    3-deoxy-a-d-manno-oct-2-ulopyranosonic acid
    LA
    lipid A
    LMM
    low molecular mass
    OC
    outer core
    OPS
    O-polysaccharide
    PCP
    phenol–chloroform–light petroleum
    PhW
    phenol/water
    R-form
    rough form