Lipopolysaccharide smooth-rough phase variation in bacteria of the genus Chlamydia

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Abstract

In two strains of Chlamydia psittaci and in Chlamydia trachomatis serotype L1, we have detected a so-far-unknown antigen which (i) is resistant to heat and proteolytic digestion, (ii) can be extracted with phenol-water into the water phase, (iii) gives a ladder-like banding pattern in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, (iv) is immunogenic in rabbits and mice, and (v) contains immunoreactivity of lipid A, a common and characteristic component of gram-negative lipopolysaccharides (LPS). Thus, chlamydiae contain, in addition to the known rough-type LPS, another LPS type which is phenotypically smooth (S-LPS). S-LPS was observed preferentially in chlamydiae grown in the yolk sac of embryonated eggs; it was, however, also detected by immunofluorescence in tissue culture-grown chlamydiae with a monoclonal antibody against S-LPS.

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APA

Lukacova, M., Baumann, M., Brade, L., Mamat, U., & Brade, H. (1994). Lipopolysaccharide smooth-rough phase variation in bacteria of the genus Chlamydia. Infection and Immunity, 62(6), 2270–2276. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.62.6.2270-2276.1994

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