Chuan Yu, Ming Li, Yanan Sun, Xingguo Wang, Yong Chen
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引用次数: 5
摘要
作为细菌感染或生物污垢的起始步骤,细菌在细胞或底物上的粘附通常是抗菌设计的最佳目标。磷脂酰乙醇胺(PE)是细菌体内的主要磷脂,其在细菌黏附中的作用尚不清楚。本研究利用4株大肠杆菌,包括2株PE- PC -和2株PE- PC+突变株和2株含PE的野生型对照(PE + PC -株),研究PE缺乏对细菌黏附的影响。我们发现,PE缺乏可以通过下调脂多糖(LPS)的生物合成来损害大肠杆菌在巨噬细胞(人thp -1来源和小鼠RAW264.7巨噬细胞)或玻璃盖上的粘附,这可以通过高半乳糖/乳糖培养逆转,但葡萄糖培养不可逆转。这些数据表明,PE可能通过影响LPS的生物合成在细菌粘附中发挥重要作用,并提示靶向PE的生物合成也是一种潜在的抗菌策略。
Phosphatidylethanolamine Deficiency Impairs Escherichia coli Adhesion by Downregulating Lipopolysaccharide Synthesis, Which is Reversible by High Galactose/Lactose Cultivation
Abstract As the initiation step of bacterial infection or biofouling, bacterial adhesion on cells or substrates is generally an optimal target for antibacterial design. Phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) is the principal phospholipid in bacteria, and its function in bacterial adhesion remains unclear. In this study, four E. coli strains including two PE-deficient mutants (PE−PC− and PE−PC+ strains) and two PE-containing wild-type controls (PE + PC− strains) were recruited to investigate the influence of PE deficiency on bacterial adhesion. We found that PE deficiency could impair E. coli adhesion on macrophages (human THP-1-derived and mouse RAW264.7 macrophages) or glass coverslips by downregulating lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis, which could be reversible by high galactose/lactose but not glucose cultivation. The data imply that PE play important role in bacterial adhesion probably via affecting LPS biosynthesis and suggest that targeting PE biosynthesis is also a potential antibacterial strategy.
期刊介绍:
Cessation
Cell Communication and Adhesion is an international Open Access journal which provides a central forum for research on mechanisms underlying cellular signalling and adhesion. The journal provides a single source of information concerning all forms of cellular communication, cell junctions, adhesion molecules and families of receptors from diverse biological systems.
The journal welcomes submission of original research articles, reviews, short communications and conference reports.