A method has been developed to separate the cell envelope of encapsulated (type b) H. influenzae into its outer and inner membrane components with procedures that avoided two problems encountered in fractionation of this envelope; the tendency of the outer and inner membranes to hybridize and the tendency of the apparently fragile inner membrane to fragment into difficulty sedimentable units. Log phase cells, whose lipids were radioactivity labeled, were lysed by passage through a French press. The lysate was applied to a discontinuous sucrose gradient, and envelope-rich material was collected by centrifugation onto a cushion of dense sucrose under carefully controlled conditions. This material was then further fractioned by isopycnic centrifugation in a sucrose gradient to yield four membrane fractions which were partially characterized. On the basis of their radioactivity, buoyant density, ultrastructure, polypeptide composition, and content of phospholipid, protein, lipopolysaccharide, and succine dehydrogenase, these fractions were identified as follows: fraction 1, outer membrane vesicles with very little inner membrane contamination (<4%); fraction 2, outer membrane vesicles containing entrapped inner membrane; fraction 3, a protein-rich fraction of inner membrane; fraction 4, a protein-poor fraction of inner membrane. Fractions 3 and 4 contained about 25% outer membrane contamination.
CITATION STYLE
Loeb, M. R., Zachary, A. L., & Smith, D. H. (1981). Isolation and partial characterization of outer and inner membranes from encapsulated Haemophilus influenzae type b. Journal of Bacteriology, 145(1), 596–604. https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.145.1.596-604.1981
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