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Ignacio Moriyon
Depto. Microbiología Universidad de Navarra
Edificio de Investigación
c/Irunlarrea 1
Pamplona, (Navarra) 31008
Spain
imoriyon@unav.es

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
David González, María-Jesús Grilló, María-Jesús De Miguel, Tara Ali, Vilma Arce-Gorvel, Rose-May Delrue, Raquel Conde-Alvarez, Pilar Muñoz, Ignacio López-Goñi, Maite Iriarte, Clara-M Marín, Andrej Weintraub, Göran Widmalm, Michel Zygmunt, Jean-Jacques Letesson, Jean-Pierre Gorvel, José-María Blasco, Ignacio Moriyón (2008)  Brucellosis vaccines: assessment of Brucella melitensis lipopolysaccharide rough mutants defective in core and O-polysaccharide synthesis and export.   PLoS ONE 3: 7. 07  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The brucellae are facultative intracellular bacteria that cause brucellosis, one of the major neglected zoonoses. In endemic areas, vaccination is the only effective way to control this disease. Brucella melitensis Rev 1 is a vaccine effective against the brucellosis of sheep and goat caused by B. melitensis, the commonest source of human infection. However, Rev 1 carries a smooth lipopolysaccharide with an O-polysaccharide that elicits antibodies interfering in serodiagnosis, a major problem in eradication campaigns. Because of this, rough Brucella mutants lacking the O-polysaccharide have been proposed as vaccines. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To examine the possibilities of rough vaccines, we screened B. melitensis for lipopolysaccharide genes and obtained mutants representing all main rough phenotypes with regard to core oligosaccharide and O-polysaccharide synthesis and export. Using the mouse model, mutants were classified into four attenuation patterns according to their multiplication and persistence in spleens at different doses. In macrophages, mutants belonging to three of these attenuation patterns reached the Brucella characteristic intracellular niche and multiplied intracellularly, suggesting that they could be suitable vaccine candidates. Virulence patterns, intracellular behavior and lipopolysaccharide defects roughly correlated with the degree of protection afforded by the mutants upon intraperitoneal vaccination of mice. However, when vaccination was applied by the subcutaneous route, only two mutants matched the protection obtained with Rev 1 albeit at doses one thousand fold higher than this reference vaccine. These mutants, which were blocked in O-polysaccharide export and accumulated internal O-polysaccharides, stimulated weak anti-smooth lipopolysaccharide antibodies. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The results demonstrate that no rough mutant is equal to Rev 1 in laboratory models and question the notion that rough vaccines are suitable for the control of brucellosis in endemic areas.
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2007
 
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Julie Lamontagne, Heather Butler, Esteban Chaves-Olarte, Joanna Hunter, Michael Schirm, Caroline Paquet, Mei Tian, Paul Kearney, Lyes Hamaidi, Daniel Chelsky, Ignacio Moriyón, Edgardo Moreno, Eustache Paramithiotis (2007)  Extensive cell envelope modulation is associated with virulence in Brucella abortus.   J Proteome Res 6: 4. 1519-1529 Apr  
Abstract: Brucella virulence is linked to components of the cell envelope and tightly connected to the function of the BvrR/BvrS sensory-regulatory system. To quantify the impact of BvrR/BvrS on cell envelope proteins, we performed a label-free mass spectrometry-based proteomic analysis of spontaneously released outer membrane fragments from four strains of Brucella abortus (wild type virulent, avirulent bvrR- and bvrS- mutants as well as reconstituted virulent bvrR+ (bvrR-/pbvrR+)). We identified 167 differentially expressed proteins, of which 25 were assigned to the outer membrane. Approximately half of the outer membrane proteins decreased in abundance, whereas half increased. Notably, expression of five Omp3 family proteins decreased whereas five lipoproteins increased in the mutant strains. In the periplasmic space, by contrast, approximately 80% of the 60 differentially expressed proteins were increased in at least one avirulent mutant. Periplasmic proteins are primarily involved in substrate uptake and transport, and a uniform increase in this class may indicate a nutritional stress response, possibly a consequence of defective outer membrane function. Virtually all proteins reverted to wild type levels in the reconstituted virulent bvrR+ strain. We propose that the wide changes in cell envelope protein expression relate to the markedly avirulent phenotype of bvrR- and bvrS- mutants and that Brucella virulence depends on regulatory networks involving cell envelope and metabolism rather than on discrete virulence factors. This model may be relevant to other alpha-Proteobacteria harboring BvrR/BvrS orthologous systems known to be essential for parasitism or endosymbiosis.
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Jörg Andrä, Daniel Monreal, Guillermo Martinez de Tejada, Claudia Olak, Gerald Brezesinski, Susana Sanchez Gomez, Torsten Goldmann, Rainer Bartels, Klaus Brandenburg, Ignacio Moriyon (2007)  Rationale for the design of shortened derivatives of the NK-lysin-derived antimicrobial peptide NK-2 with improved activity against Gram-negative pathogens.   J Biol Chem 282: 20. 14719-14728 May  
Abstract: The peptide NK-2 is an effective antimicrobial agent with low hemolytic and cytotoxic activities and is thus a promising candidate for clinical applications. It comprises the alpha-helical, cationic core region of porcine NK-lysin a homolog of human granulysin and of amoebapores of pathogenic amoeba. Here we visualized the impact of NK-2 on Escherichia coli by electron microscopy and used NK-2 as a template for sequence variations to improve the peptide stability and activity and to gain insight into the structure/function relationships. We synthesized 18 new peptides and tested their activities on seven Gram-negative and one Gram-positive bacterial strains, human erythrocytes, and HeLa cells. Although all peptides appeared unordered in buffer, those active against bacteria adopted an alpha-helical conformation in membrane-mimetic environments like trifluoroethanol and negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol (PG) liposomes that mimick the cytoplasmic membrane of bacteria. This conformation was not observed in the presence of liposomes consisting of zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine (PC) typical for the human cell plasma membrane. The interaction was paralleled by intercalation of these peptides into PG liposomes as determined by FRET spectroscopy. A comparative analysis between biological activity and the calculated peptide parameters revealed that the decisive factor for a broad spectrum activity is not the peptide overall hydrophobicity or amphipathicity, but the possession of a minimal positive net charge plus a highly amphipathic anchor point of only seven amino acid residues (two helical turns).
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Jörg Howe, Jörg Andrä, Raquel Conde, Maite Iriarte, Patrick Garidel, Michel H J Koch, Thomas Gutsmann, Ignacio Moriyón, Klaus Brandenburg (2007)  Thermodynamic analysis of the lipopolysaccharide-dependent resistance of gram-negative bacteria against polymyxin B.   Biophys J 92: 8. 2796-2805 Apr  
Abstract: Cationic antimicrobial cationic peptides (CAMP) have been found in recent years to play a decisive role in hosts' defense against microbial infection. They have also been investigated as a new therapeutic tool, necessary in particular due to the increasing resistance of microbiological populations to antibiotics. The structural basis of the activity of CAMPs has only partly been elucidated and may comprise quite different mechanism at the site of the bacterial cell membranes or in their cytoplasm. Polymyxin B (PMB) is a CAMP which is effective in particular against Gram-negative bacteria and has been well studied with the aim to understand its interaction with the outer membrane or isolated membrane components such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and to define the mechanism by which the peptides kill bacteria or neutralize LPS. Since PMB resistance of bacteria is a long-known phenomenon and is attributed to structural changes in the LPS moiety of the respective bacteria, we have performed a thermodynamic and biophysical analysis to get insights into the mechanisms of various LPS/PMB interactions in comparison to LPS from sensitive strains. In isothermal titration calorimetric (ITC) experiments considerable differences of PMB binding to sensitive and resistant LPS were found. For sensitive LPS the endothermic enthalpy change in the gel phase of the hydrocarbon chains converts into an exothermic reaction in the liquid crystalline phase. In contrast, for resistant LPS the binding enthalpy change remains endothermic in both phases. As infrared data show, these differences can be explained by steric changes in the headgroup region of the respective LPS.
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Lorea Manterola, Caterina Guzmán-Verri, Esteban Chaves-Olarte, Elías Barquero-Calvo, María-Jesús de Miguel, Ignacio Moriyón, María-Jesús Grilló, Ignacio López-Goñi, Edgardo Moreno (2007)  BvrR/BvrS-controlled outer membrane proteins Omp3a and Omp3b are not essential for Brucella abortus virulence.   Infect Immun 75: 10. 4867-4874 Oct  
Abstract: The Brucella abortus two-component regulatory system BvrR/BvrS controls the expression of outer membrane proteins (Omp) Omp3a (Omp25) and Omp3b (Omp22). Disruption of bvrS or bvrR generates avirulent mutants with altered cell permeability, higher sensitivity to microbicidal peptides, and complement. Consequently, the role of Omp3a and Omp3b in virulence was examined. Similar to bvrS or bvrR mutants, omp3a and omp3b mutants displayed increased attachment to cells, indicating surface alterations. However, they showed unaltered permeability; normal expression of Omp10, Omp16, Omp19, Omp2b, and Omp1; native hapten polysaccharide; and lipopolysaccharide and were resistant to complement and polymyxin B at ranges similar to those of the wild-type (WT) counterpart. Likewise, omp3a and omp3b mutants were able to replicate in murine macrophages and in HeLa cells, were resistant to the killing action of human neutrophils, and persisted in mice, like the WT strain. Murine macrophages infected with the omp3a mutant generated slightly higher levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha than the WT, whereas the bvrS mutant induced lower levels of this cytokine. Since the absence of Omp3a or Omp3b does not result in attenuation, it can be concluded that BvrR/BvrS influences additional Brucella properties involved in virulence. Our results are discussed in the light of previous works suggesting that disruption of omp3a generates attenuated Brucella strains, and we speculate on the role of group 3 Omps.
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Elías Barquero-Calvo, Esteban Chaves-Olarte, David S Weiss, Caterina Guzmán-Verri, Carlos Chacón-Díaz, Alexandra Rucavado, Ignacio Moriyón, Edgardo Moreno (2007)  Brucella abortus uses a stealthy strategy to avoid activation of the innate immune system during the onset of infection.   PLoS ONE 2: 7. 07  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: To unravel the strategy by which Brucella abortus establishes chronic infections, we explored its early interaction with innate immunity. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Brucella did not induce proinflammatory responses as demonstrated by the absence of leukocyte recruitment, humoral or cellular blood changes in mice. Brucella hampered neutrophil (PMN) function and PMN depletion did not influence the course of infection. Brucella barely induced proinflammatory cytokines and consumed complement, and was strongly resistant to bactericidal peptides, PMN extracts and serum. Brucella LPS (BrLPS), NH-polysaccharides, cyclic glucans, outer membrane fragments or disrupted bacterial cells displayed low biological activity in mice and cells. The lack of proinflammatory responses was not due to conspicuous inhibitory mechanisms mediated by the invading Brucella or its products. When activated 24 h post-infection macrophages did not kill Brucella, indicating that the replication niche was not fusiogenic with lysosomes. Brucella intracellular replication did not interrupt the cell cycle or caused cytotoxicity in WT, TLR4 and TLR2 knockout cells. TNF-alpha-induction was TLR4- and TLR2-dependent for live but not for killed B. abortus. However, intracellular replication in TLR4, TLR2 and TLR4/2 knockout cells was not altered and the infection course and anti-Brucella immunity development upon BrLPS injection was unaffected in TLR4 mutant mice. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: We propose that Brucella has developed a stealth strategy through PAMPs reduction, modification and hiding, ensuring by this manner low stimulatory activity and toxicity for cells. This strategy allows Brucella to reach its replication niche before activation of antimicrobial mechanisms by adaptive immunity. This model is consistent with clinical profiles observed in humans and natural hosts at the onset of infection and could be valid for those intracellular pathogens phylogenetically related to Brucella that also cause long lasting infections.
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Jörg Andrä, Jörg Howe, Patrick Garidel, Manfred Rössle, Walter Richter, José Leiva-León, Ignacio Moriyon, Rainer Bartels, Thomas Gutsmann, Klaus Brandenburg (2007)  Mechanism of interaction of optimized Limulus-derived cyclic peptides with endotoxins: thermodynamic, biophysical and microbiological analysis.   Biochem J 406: 2. 297-307 Sep  
Abstract: On the basis of formerly investigated peptides corresponding to the endotoxin-binding domain from LALF [Limulus anti-LPS (lipopolysaccharide) factor], a protein from Limulus polyphemus, we have designed and synthesized peptides of different lengths with the aim of obtaining potential therapeutic agents against septic shock syndrome. For an understanding of the mechanisms of action, we performed a detailed physicochemical and biophysical analysis of the interaction of rough mutant LPS with these peptides by applying FTIR (Fourier-transform infrared) spectroscopy, SAXS (small-angle X-ray scattering), calorimetric techniques [DSC (differential scanning calorimetry) and ITC (isothermal titration calorimetry)] and FFTEM (freeze-fracture transmission electron microscopy). Also, the action of the peptides on bacteria of different origin in microbial assays was investigated. Using FTIR and DSC, our results indicated a strong fluidization of the lipid A acyl chains due to peptide binding, with a decrease in the endothermic melting enthalpy change of the acyl chains down to a complete disappearance in the 1:0.5 to 1:2 [LPS]:[peptide] molar ratio range. Via ITC, it was deduced that the binding is a clearly exothermic process which becomes saturated at a 1:0.5 to 1:2 [LPS]:[peptide] molar ratio range. The results obtained with SAXS indicated a drastic change of the aggregate structures of LPS into a multilamellar stack, which was visualized in electron micrographs as hundreds of lamellar layers. This can be directly correlated with the inhibition of the LPS-induced production of tumour necrosis factor alpha in human mononuclear cells, but not with the action of the peptides on bacteria.
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2006
 
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María Jesús Grilló, Lorea Manterola, María Jesús de Miguel, Pilar María Muñoz, José María Blasco, Ignacio Moriyón, Ignacio López-Goñi (2006)  Increases of efficacy as vaccine against Brucella abortus infection in mice by simultaneous inoculation with avirulent smooth bvrS/bvrR and rough wbkA mutants.   Vaccine 24: 15. 2910-2916 Apr  
Abstract: The Brucella abortus S19 and RB51 strains are the most widely used live vaccines against bovine brucellosis. However, both can induce abortion and milk excretion, S19 vaccination interferes in serological tests, and RB51 is less effective. We have shown previously that a rough wbkAB. abortus mutant is attenuated and a better vaccine than RB51 in BALB/c mice, and that mutants in the two-component regulatory system bvrS/bvrR are markedly attenuated while keeping a smooth lipopolysaccharide (S-LPS). In this work, we tested whether simultaneous inoculation with live bvrS increases wbkA vaccine efficacy in mice. Even at high doses, the bvrS mutant was cleared much faster from spleens than the wbkA mutant. The splenic persistence of the wbkA mutant increased when inoculated along with the bvrS mutant, but also with inactivated bvrS cells or with purified B. abortus S-LPS, strongly suggesting that S-LPS in the bvrS mutant played a determinant role in the wbkA persistence. When inoculated alone, both mutants protected against virulent B. abortus but less than when inoculated simultaneously, and the protection afforded by the combination was better than that obtained with B. abortus S19. Increased protection was also obtained after simultaneous inoculation of the wbkA mutant and inactivated bvrS cells or purified S-LPS, showing again the role played by the S-LPS in the bvrS cells. In mice, the bvrS-wbkA combination induced an antibody response reduced with respect to B. abortus S19 vaccination. Thus, the simultaneous use of live bvrS and wbkA B. abortus mutants seems a promising approach to overcome the problems of the S19 andRB51 vaccines.
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Nicolas Lapaque, Frédérique Forquet, Chantal de Chastellier, Zohair Mishal, Gilles Jolly, Edgardo Moreno, Ignacio Moriyon, John E Heuser, Hai-Tao He, Jean-Pierre Gorvel (2006)  Characterization of Brucella abortus lipopolysaccharide macrodomains as mega rafts.   Cell Microbiol 8: 2. 197-206 Feb  
Abstract: The lipopolysaccharides (LPS) of intracellular Proteobacteria such as Brucella, Chlamydia, Legionella and Rickettsia, have properties distinct from enterobacterial LPSs. These properties include deficient LPS induction of host cell activation, low endotoxicity and resistance to macrophage degradation. Together these constitute key virulence mechanisms for intracellular survival and replication. We previously demonstrated that B. abortus LPS captured by macrophages was recycled back to the plasma membrane where it was found associated with macrodomains. Furthermore, this LPS interferes with the MHC class II (MHC-II) presentation of peptides to specific T cell hybridomas. Here, we characterized the Brucella LPS macrodomains by microscopy and biochemistry approaches. We show for the first time that LPS macrodomains act as detergent resistant membranes (DRMs), segregating several lipid-raft components, LPS-binding proteins and MHC-II molecules. Brucella LPS macrodomains remain intact for several months in macrophages and are resistant to the disruptive effects of methyl beta-cyclodextrin. Fluorescent anisotropy measurements show that B. abortus LPS is responsible for the formation of rigid surface membrane complexes. In addition, relocalization of MHC-II molecules is observed in these structures. The effects of B. abortus LPS on membrane properties could be responsible for pathogenic effects such as the inhibition of MHC-II-dependent antigen presentation.
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Nicolas Lapaque, Osamu Takeuchi, Fernando Corrales, Shizuo Akira, Ignacio Moriyon, Jonathan C Howard, Jean-Pierre Gorvel (2006)  Differential inductions of TNF-alpha and IGTP, IIGP by structurally diverse classic and non-classic lipopolysaccharides.   Cell Microbiol 8: 3. 401-413 Mar  
Abstract: The innate immune system recognizes microbes by characteristic molecules like the Gram-negative lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Lipid A (the LPS bioactive moiety) signals through toll-like receptors (TLRs) to induce pro-inflammatory molecules and small GTPases of the p47 family involved in intracellular pathogen control. We tested TNF-alpha and p47-GTPase induction in macrophages using classical LPSs [lipid As with glucosamine backbones, ester- and amide-linked C14:0(3-OH) and C12 to C16 in acyloxyacyl groups] of wild type and mutant Escherichia coli and Yersinia species and non-classical LPSs [lipid As with diaminoglucose, ester-linked 3-OH-fatty acids and C28:0(27-OH) and C23:0(29-OH) in acyloxyacyl groups] of plant endosymbionts (Rhizobium), intracellular pathogens (Brucella and Legionella) and phylogenetically related opportunistic bacteria (Ochrobactrum). Classical but not non-classical LPSs efficiently induced TNF-alpha, IIGP and IGTP p47-GTPase expression. Remarkably, the acyloxyacyl groups in classical LPSs necessary to efficiently induce TNF-alpha were not necessary to induce p47-GTPases, suggesting that different aspects of lipid A are involved in this differential induction. This was confirmed by using PPDM2, a non-endotoxic lipid A-structurally related synthetic glycolipid. Despite their different bioactivity, all types of LPSs signalled through TLR-4 and not through TLR-2. However, whereas TNF-alpha induction was myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88)-dependent, that of p47-GTPases occurred via a MyD88-independent pathway. These observations show that different aspects of the LPS pathogen-associated molecular pattern may be triggering different signalling pathways linked to the same TLR. They also reinforce the hypothesis that non-classical lipid As act as virulence factors by favouring the escape from the innate immune system.
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Raquel Conde-Alvarez, María J Grilló, Suzana P Salcedo, María J de Miguel, Emilie Fugier, Jean Pierre Gorvel, Ignacio Moriyón, Maite Iriarte (2006)  Synthesis of phosphatidylcholine, a typical eukaryotic phospholipid, is necessary for full virulence of the intracellular bacterial parasite Brucella abortus.   Cell Microbiol 8: 8. 1322-1335 Aug  
Abstract: Phosphatidylcholine (PC) is a typical eukaryotic phospholipid absent from most prokaryotes. Thus, its presence in some intracellular bacteria is intriguing as it may constitute host mimicry. The role of PC in Brucella abortus was examined by generating mutants in pcs (BApcs) and pmtA (BApmtA), which encode key enzymes of the two bacterial PC biosynthetic routes, the choline and methyl-transferase pathways. In rich medium, BApcs and the double mutant BApcspmtA but not BApmtA displayed reduced growth, increased phosphatidylethanolamine and no PC, showing that Pcs is essential for PC synthesis under these conditions. In minimal medium, the parental strain, BApcs and BApmtA showed reduced but significant amounts of PC suggesting that PmtA may also be functional. Probing with phage Tb, antibiotics, polycations and serum demonstrated that all mutants had altered envelopes. In macrophages, BApcs and BApcspmtA showed reduced ability to evade fusion with lysosomes and establish a replication niche. In mice, BApcs showed attenuation only at early times after infection, BApmtA at later stages and BApcspmtA throughout. The results suggest that Pcs and PmtA have complementary roles in vivo related to nutrient availability and that PC and the membrane properties that depend on this typical eukaryotic phospholipid are essential for Brucella virulence.
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2005
 
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P M Muñoz, C M Marín, D Monreal, D González, B Garin-Bastuji, R Díaz, R C Mainar-Jaime, I Moriyón, J M Blasco (2005)  Efficacy of several serological tests and antigens for diagnosis of bovine brucellosis in the presence of false-positive serological results due to Yersinia enterocolitica O:9.   Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 12: 1. 141-151 Jan  
Abstract: Yersinia enterocolitica O:9 bears a smooth lipopolysaccharide (S-LPS) of Brucella sp. O-chain A+C/Y epitopic structure and is a cause of false-positive serological reactions (FPSR) in standard tests for cattle brucellosis. Brucella S-LPS, cross-reacting S-LPSs representing several O-chain epitope combinations, Brucella core lipid A epitopes (rough LPS), Brucella abortus S-LPS-derived polysaccharide, native hapten polysaccharide, rough LPS group 3 outer membrane protein complexes, recombinant BP26, and cytosolic proteins were tested in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) and precipitation tests to detect cattle brucellosis (sensitivity) and to differentiate it from FPSR (specificity). No single serological test and antigen combination showed 100% sensitivity and specificity simultaneously. Immunoprecipitation tests with native hapten polysaccharide, counterimmunoelectrophoresis with cytosolic proteins, and a chaotropic ELISA with Brucella S-LPS were 100% specific but less sensitive than the Rose Bengal test, complement fixation, and indirect ELISA with Brucella S-LPSs and native hapten or S-LPS-derived polysaccharides. A competitive ELISA with Brucella S-LPS and M84 C/Y-specific monoclonal antibody was not 100% specific and was less sensitive than other tests. ELISA with Brucella suis bv. 2 S-LPS (deficient in C epitopes), Escherichia hermannii S-LPSs [lacking the contiguous alpha-(1-2)-linked perosamine residues characteristic of Y. enterocolitica S-LPS], BP26 recombinant protein, and Brucella cytosolic fractions did not provide adequate sensitivity/specificity ratios. Although no serological test and antigen combination fully resolved the diagnosis of bovine brucellosis in the presence of FPSR, some are simple and practical alternatives to the brucellin skin test currently recommended for differential diagnosis.
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Beatriz Arellano-Reynoso, Nicolas Lapaque, Susana Salcedo, Gabriel Briones, Andrés Eduardo Ciocchini, Rodolfo Ugalde, Edgardo Moreno, Ignacio Moriyón, Jean-Pierre Gorvel (2005)  Cyclic beta-1,2-glucan is a Brucella virulence factor required for intracellular survival.   Nat Immunol 6: 6. 618-625 Jun  
Abstract: Pathogenic brucella bacteria have developed strategies to persist for prolonged periods of time in host cells, avoiding innate immune responses. Here we show that the cyclic beta-1,2-glucans (CbetaG) synthesized by brucella is important for circumventing host cell defenses. CbetaG acted in lipid rafts found on host cell membranes. CbetaG-deficient mutants failed to prevent phagosome-lysosome fusion and could not replicate. However, when treated with purified CbetaG or synthetic methyl-beta-cyclodextrin, the mutants were able to control vacuole maturation by avoiding lysosome fusion, and this allowed intracellular brucella to survive and reach the endoplasmic reticulum. Fusion between the endoplasmic reticulum and the brucella-containing vacuole depended on the brucella virulence type IV secretion system but not on CbetaG. Brucella CbetaG is thus a virulence factor that interacts with lipid rafts and contributes to pathogen survival.
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Jörg Andrä, Karl Lohner, Sylvie E Blondelle, Roman Jerala, Ignacio Moriyon, Michel H J Koch, Patrick Garidel, Klaus Brandenburg (2005)  Enhancement of endotoxin neutralization by coupling of a C12-alkyl chain to a lactoferricin-derived peptide.   Biochem J 385: Pt 1. 135-143 Jan  
Abstract: Antibacterial peptide acylation, which mimics the structure of the natural lipopeptide polymyxin B, increases antimicrobial and endotoxin-neutralizing activities. The interaction of the lactoferricin-derived peptide LF11 and its N-terminally acylated analogue, lauryl-LF11, with different chemotypes of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS Re, Ra and smooth S form) was investigated by biophysical means and was related to the peptides' biological activities. Both peptides exhibit high antibacterial activity against the three strains of Salmonella enterica differing in the LPS chemotype. Lauryl-LF11 has one order of magnitude higher activity against Re-type, but activity against Ra- and S-type bacteria is comparable with that of LF11. The alkyl derivative peptide lauryl-LF11 shows a much stronger inhibition of the LPS-induced cytokine induction in human mononuclear cells than LF11. Although peptide-LPS interaction is essentially of electrostatic nature, the lauryl-modified peptide displays a strong hydrophobic component. Such a feature might then explain the fact that saturation of the peptide binding takes place at a much lower peptide/LPS ratio for LF11 than for lauryl-LF11, and that an overcompensation of the negative LPS backbone charges is observed for lauryl-LF11. The influence of LF11 on the gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase-transition of LPS is negligible for LPS Re, but clearly fluidizing for LPS Ra. In contrast, lauryl-LF11 causes a cholesterol-like effect in the two chemotypes, fluidizing in the gel and rigidifying of the hydrocarbon chains in the liquid-crystalline phase. Both peptides convert the mixed unilamellar/non-lamellar aggregate structure of lipid A, the 'endotoxic principle' of LPS, into a multilamellar one. These data contribute to the understanding of the mechanisms of the peptide-mediated neutralization of endotoxin and effect of lipid modification of peptides.
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Nicolas Lapaque, Ignacio Moriyon, Edgardo Moreno, Jean-Pierre Gorvel (2005)  Brucella lipopolysaccharide acts as a virulence factor.   Curr Opin Microbiol 8: 1. 60-66 Feb  
Abstract: Brucella is a facultative intracellular bacterium responsible for brucellosis. Virulence factors involved in Brucella replication and Brucella's strategies to circumvent the immune response are under investigation. VirB proteins that form the type IV secretion system and that are involved in intracellular replication are considered as one of Brucella's virulence factors. In addition to this secretion system, bacterial outer membrane components have also been described as being implicated in Brucella survival in the host. For example, this bacterium possesses an unconventional non-endotoxic lipopolysaccharide that confers resistance to anti-microbial attacks and modulates the host immune response. These properties make lipopolysaccharide an important virulence factor for Brucella survival and replication in the host.
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Raúl C Mainar-Jaime, Pilar M Muñoz, María J de Miguel, María J Grilló, Clara M Marín, Ignacio Moriyón, José M Blasco (2005)  Specificity dependence between serological tests for diagnosing bovine brucellosis in Brucella-free farms showing false positive serological reactions due to Yersinia enterocolitica O:9.   Can Vet J 46: 10. 913-916 Oct  
Abstract: When brucellosis false positive serological reactions happen in cattle, the serial use of pairs of specificity-correlated serological tests (rose bengal, complement fixation, competitive ELISA) results in specificities lower than expected. In this situation, highly specific tests, such as the indirect ELISA used alone, may be more adequate than serial testing.
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Lorea Manterola, Ignacio Moriyón, Edgardo Moreno, Alberto Sola-Landa, David S Weiss, Michel H J Koch, Jörg Howe, Klaus Brandenburg, Ignacio López-Goñi (2005)  The lipopolysaccharide of Brucella abortus BvrS/BvrR mutants contains lipid A modifications and has higher affinity for bactericidal cationic peptides.   J Bacteriol 187: 16. 5631-5639 Aug  
Abstract: The two-component BvrS/BvrR system is essential for Brucella abortus virulence. It was shown previously that its dysfunction abrogates expression of some major outer membrane proteins and increases bactericidal peptide sensitivity. Here, we report that BvrS/BvrR mutants have increased surface hydrophobicity and susceptibility to killing by nonimmune serum. The bvrS and bvrR mutant lipopolysaccharides (LPSs) bound more polymyxin B, chimeras constructed with bvrS mutant cells and parental LPS showed augmented polymyxin B resistance, and, conversely, parental cells and bvrS mutant LPS chimeras were more sensitive and displayed polymyxin B-characteristic outer membrane lesions, implicating LPS as being responsible for the phenotype of the BvrS/BvrR mutants. No qualitative or quantitative changes were detected in other envelope and outer membrane components examined: periplasmic beta(1-2) glucans, native hapten polysaccharide, and phospholipids. The LPS of the mutants was similar to parental LPS in O-polysaccharide polymerization and fine structure but showed both increased underacylated lipid A species and higher acyl-chain fluidity that correlated with polymyxin B binding. These lipid A changes did not alter LPS cytokine induction, showing that in contrast to other gram-negative pathogens, recognition by innate immune receptors is not decreased by these changes in LPS structure. Transcription of Brucella genes required for incorporating long acyl chains into lipid A (acpXL and lpxXL) or implicated in lipid A acylation control (bacA) was not affected. We propose that in Brucella the outer membrane homeostasis depends on the functioning of BvrS/BvrR. Accordingly, disruption of BvrS/BvrR damages the outer membrane, thus contributing to the severe attenuation manifested by bvrS and bvrR mutants.
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2004
 
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Ignacio Moriyón, María Jesús Grilló, Daniel Monreal, David González, Clara Marín, Ignacio López-Goñi, Raúl C Mainar-Jaime, Edgardo Moreno, José María Blasco (2004)  Rough vaccines in animal brucellosis: structural and genetic basis and present status.   Vet Res 35: 1. 1-38 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: Brucellosis control and eradication requires serological tests and vaccines. Effective classical vaccines (S19 in cattle and Rev 1 in small ruminants), however, induce antibodies to the O-polysaccharide of the lipopolysaccharide which may be difficult to distinguish from those resulting from infection and may thus complicate diagnosis. Rough attenuated mutants lack the O-polysaccharide and would solve this problem if eliciting protective immunity; the empirically obtained rough mutants 45/20 and RB51 have been used as vaccines. Strain 45/20 is reportedly unstable and it is not presently used. RB51 is increasingly used instead of S19 in some countries but it is rifampicin resistant and its effectiveness is controversial. Some controlled experiments have found good or absolute protection in adult cattle vaccinated orally (full dose) or subcutaneously (reduced dose) and in one field experiment, RB51 was reported to afford absolute protection to calves and to perform better than S19. Controlled experiments in calves, however, have shown reduced doses of RB51 to be ineffective, full doses only partially effective, and RB51 less effective than S19 against severe challenges. Moreover, other observations suggest that RB51 is ineffective when prevalence is high. RB51 is not useful in sheep and evidence in goats is preliminary and contradictory. Rough mutants obtained by molecular biology methods on the knowledge of the genetics and structure of Brucella lipopolysaccharide may offer alternatives. The B. abortus manBcore (rfbK) mutant seems promising in cattle, and analyses in mice suggest that mutations affecting only the O-polysaccharide result in better vaccines than those affecting both core and O-polysaccharide. Possible uses of rough vaccines also include boosting immunity by revaccination but solid evidence on its effectiveness, safety and practicality is not available.
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PMID 
Amélie Dricot, Jean-François Rual, Philippe Lamesch, Nicolas Bertin, Denis Dupuy, Tong Hao, Christophe Lambert, Régis Hallez, Jean-Marc Delroisse, Jean Vandenhaute, Ignacio Lopez-Goñi, Ignacio Moriyon, Juan M Garcia-Lobo, Félix J Sangari, Alastair P Macmillan, Sally J Cutler, Adrian M Whatmore, Stephanie Bozak, Reynaldo Sequerra, Lynn Doucette-Stamm, Marc Vidal, David E Hill, Jean-Jacques Letesson, Xavier De Bolle (2004)  Generation of the Brucella melitensis ORFeome version 1.1.   Genome Res 14: 10B. 2201-2206 Oct  
Abstract: The bacteria of the Brucella genus are responsible for a worldwide zoonosis called brucellosis. They belong to the alpha-proteobacteria group, as many other bacteria that live in close association with a eukaryotic host. Importantly, the Brucellae are mainly intracellular pathogens, and the molecular mechanisms of their virulence are still poorly understood. Using the complete genome sequence of Brucella melitensis, we generated a database of protein-coding open reading frames (ORFs) and constructed an ORFeome library of 3091 Gateway Entry clones, each containing a defined ORF. This first version of the Brucella ORFeome (v1.1) provides the coding sequences in a user-friendly format amenable to high-throughput functional genomic and proteomic experiments, as the ORFs are conveniently transferable from the Entry clones to various Expression vectors by recombinational cloning. The cloning of the Brucella ORFeome v1.1 should help to provide a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms of virulence, including the identification of bacterial protein-protein interactions, but also interactions between bacterial effectors and their host's targets.
Notes:
2003
 
PMID 
J A Bengoechea, K Brandenburg, M D Arraiza, U Seydel, M Skurnik, I Moriyón (2003)  Pathogenic Yersinia enterocolitica strains increase the outer membrane permeability in response to environmental stimuli by modulating lipopolysaccharide fluidity and lipid A structure.   Infect Immun 71: 4. 2014-2021 Apr  
Abstract: Pathogenic biotypes of Yersinia enterocolitica (serotypes O:3, O:8, O:9, and O:13), but not environmental biotypes (serotypes O:5, O:6, O:7,8, and O:7,8,13,19), increased their permeability to hydrophobic probes when they were grown at pH 5.5 or in EGTA-supplemented (Ca(2+)-restricted) media at 37 degrees C. A similar observation was also made when representative strains of serotypes O:8 and O:5 were tested after brief contact with human monocytes. The increase in permeability was independent of the virulence plasmid. The role of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in this phenomenon was examined by using Y. enterocolitica serotype O:8. LPS aggregates of bacteria grown in acidic or EGTA-supplemented broth took up more N-phenylnaphthylamine than LPS aggregates of bacteria grown in standard broth and also showed a marked increase in acyl chain fluidity which correlated with permeability, as determined by measurements obtained in the presence of hydrophobic dyes. No significant changes in O-antigen polymerization were observed, but lipid A acylation changed depending on the growth conditions. In standard medium at 37 degrees C, there were hexa-, penta-, and tetraacyl lipid A forms, and the pentaacyl form was dominant. The amount of tetraacyl lipid A increased in EGTA-supplemented and acidic media, and hexaacyl lipid A almost disappeared under the latter conditions. Our results suggest that pathogenic Y. enterocolitica strains modulate lipid A acylation coordinately with expression of virulence proteins, thus reducing LPS packing and increasing outer membrane permeability. The changes in permeability, LPS acyl chain fluidity, and lipid A acylation in pathogenic Y. enterocolitica strains approximate the characteristics in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia pestis and suggest that there is a common outer membrane pattern associated with pathogenicity.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D Monreal, M J Grilló, D González, C M Marín, M J De Miguel, I López-Goñi, J M Blasco, A Cloeckaert, I Moriyón (2003)  Characterization of Brucella abortus O-polysaccharide and core lipopolysaccharide mutants and demonstration that a complete core is required for rough vaccines to be efficient against Brucella abortus and Brucella ovis in the mouse model.   Infect Immun 71: 6. 3261-3271 Jun  
Abstract: Brucella abortus rough lipopolysaccharide (LPS) mutants were obtained by transposon insertion into two wbk genes (wbkA [putative glycosyltransferase; formerly rfbU] and per [perosamine synthetase]), into manB (pmm [phosphomannomutase; formerly rfbK]), and into an unassigned gene. Consistent with gene-predicted roles, electrophoretic analysis, 2-keto-3-manno-D-octulosonate measurements, and immunoblots with monoclonal antibodies to O-polysaccharide, outer and inner core epitopes showed no O-polysaccharide expression and no LPS core defects in the wbk mutants. The rough LPS of manB mutant lacked the outer core epitope and the gene was designated manB(core) to distinguish it from the wbk manB(O-Ag). The fourth gene (provisionally designated wa**) coded for a putative glycosyltransferase involved in inner core synthesis, but the mutant kept the outer core epitope. Differences in phage and polymyxin sensitivity, exposure or expression of outer membrane protein, core and lipid A epitopes, and lipid A acylation demonstrated that small changes in LPS core caused significant differences in B. abortus outer membrane topology. In mice, the mutants showed different degrees of attenuation and induced antibodies to rough LPS and outer membrane proteins. Core-defective mutants and strain RB51 were ineffective vaccines against B. abortus in mice. The mutants per and wbkA induced protection but less than the standard smooth vaccine S19, and controls suggested that anti O-polysaccharide antibodies accounted largely for the difference. Whereas no core-defective mutant was effective against B. ovis, S19, RB51, and the wbkA and per mutants afforded similar levels of protection. These results suggest that rough Brucella vaccines should carry a complete core for maximal effectiveness.
Notes:
2002
 
DOI   
PMID 
C Guzman-Verri, L Manterola, A Sola-Landa, A Parra, A Cloeckaert, J Garin, J - P Gorvel, I Moriyon, E Moreno, I Lopez-Goni (2002)  The two-component system BvrR/BvrS essential for Brucella abortus virulence regulates the expression of outer membrane proteins with counterparts in members of the Rhizobiaceae.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99: 19. 12375-12380 Sep  
Abstract: The Brucella BvrR/BvrS two-component regulatory system is homologous to the ChvI/ChvG systems of Sinorhizobium meliloti and Agrobacterium tumefaciens necessary for endosymbiosis and pathogenicity in plants. BvrR/BvrS controls cell invasion and intracellular survival. Probing the surface of bvrR and bvrS transposon mutants with monoclonal antibodies showed all described major outer membrane proteins (Omps) but Omp25, a protein known to be involved in Brucella virulence. Absence of Omp25 expression was confirmed by two-dimensional electrophoresis of envelope fractions and by gene reporter studies. The electrophoretic analysis also revealed reduction or absence in the mutants of a second set of protein spots that by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization MS and peptide mass mapping were identified as a non-previously described Omp (Omp3b). Because bvrR and bvrS mutants are also altered in cell-surface hydrophobicity, permeability, and sensitivity to surface-targeted bactericidal peptides, it is proposed that BvrR/BvrS controls cell envelope changes necessary to transit between extracellular and intracellular environments. A genomic search revealed that Omp25 (Omp3a) and Omp3b belong to a family of Omps of plant and animal cell-associated alpha-Proteobacteria, which includes Rhizobium leguminosarum RopB and A. tumefaciens AopB. Previous work has shown that RopB is not expressed in bacteroids, that AopB is involved in tumorigenesis, and that dysfunction of A. tumefaciens ChvI/ChvG alters surface properties. It is thus proposed that the BvrR/BvrS and Omp3 homologues of the cell-associated alpha-Proteobacteria play a role in bacterial surface control and host cell interactions.
Notes:
 
PMID 
Edgardo Moreno, Axel Cloeckaert, Ignacio Moriyón (2002)  Brucella evolution and taxonomy.   Vet Microbiol 90: 1-4. 209-227 Dec  
Abstract: The genus Brucella contains alpha-Proteobacteria adapted to intracellular life within cells of a variety of mammals. Controversy has arisen concerning Brucella internal taxonomy, and it has been proposed that the DNA-DNA hybridization-based genomospecies concept be applied to the genus. According to this view, only one species, Brucella melitensis, should be recognized, and the classical species should be considered as biovars (B. melitensis biovar melitensis; B. melitensis biovar abortus; etc.). However, a critical reappraisal of the species concept, a review of the population structure of bacteria and the analysis of Brucella genetic diversity by methods other than DNA-DNA hybridization show that there are no scientific grounds to apply the genomospecies concept to this genus. On the other hand, an enlarged biological species concept allows the definition of Brucella species that are consistent with molecular analyses and support the taxonomical standing of most classical species. Both the host range as a long-recognized biological criterion and the presence of species-specific markers in outer membrane protein genes and in other genes show that B. melitensis, B. abortus, B. ovis, B. canis and B. neotomae are not mere pathovars (or nomenspecies) but biologically meaningful species. The status of B. suis is, however, less clear. These approaches should be useful to define species for the marine mammal Brucella isolates, as illustrated by the grouping of the isolates from pinnipeds or from cetaceans by omp2 gene analysis. It is shown that a correct Brucella species definition is important to understand the evolution of the genus.
Notes:
 
PMID 
I López-Goñi, C Guzmán-Verri, L Manterola, A Sola-Landa, I Moriyón, E Moreno (2002)  Regulation of Brucella virulence by the two-component system BvrR/BvrS.   Vet Microbiol 90: 1-4. 329-339 Dec  
Abstract: The Brucella BvrR/BvrS two-component regulatory system is highly similar to the regulatory and sensory proteins of Sinorhizobium and Agrobacterium necessary for endosymbiosis and pathogenicity in plants, and very similar to a putative system present in the animal pathogen Bartonella. Mutations in the bvrR or bvrS genes hamper the penetration of B. abortus in non-phagocytic cells and impairs intracellular trafficking and virulence. In contrast to virulent Brucella, BvrR/BvrS mutants do not recruit small GTPases of the Rho subfamily required for actin polymerization and penetration to cells. Dysfunction of the BvrR/BvrS system alters the outer membrane permeability, the expression of several group 3 outer membrane proteins and the pattern of lipid A acylation. Constructs of virulent B. abortus chimeras containing heterologous LPS from the bvrS(-) mutant demonstrated an altered permeability to cationic peptides similar to that of the BvrR/BvrS mutants. We hypothesize that the Brucella BvrR/BvrS is a system devoted to the homeostasis of the outer membrane and, therefore in the interface for cell invasion and mounting the required structures for intracellular parasitism.
Notes:
2000
 
PMID 
J Velasco, J A Bengoechea, K Brandenburg, B Lindner, U Seydel, D González, U Zähringer, E Moreno, I Moriyón (2000)  Brucella abortus and its closest phylogenetic relative, Ochrobactrum spp., differ in outer membrane permeability and cationic peptide resistance.   Infect Immun 68: 6. 3210-3218 Jun  
Abstract: The outer membrane (OM) of the intracellular parasite Brucella abortus is permeable to hydrophobic probes and resistant to destabilization by polycationic peptides and EDTA. The significance of these unusual properties was investigated in a comparative study with the opportunistic pathogens of the genus Ochrobactrum, the closest known Brucella relative. Ochrobactrum spp. OMs were impermeable to hydrophobic probes and sensitive to polymyxin B but resistant to EDTA. These properties were traced to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) because (i) insertion of B. abortus LPS, but not of Escherichia coli LPS, into Ochrobactrum OM increased its permeability; (ii) permeability and polymyxin B binding measured with LPS aggregates paralleled the results with live bacteria; and (iii) the predicted intermediate results were obtained with B. abortus-Ochrobactrum anthropi and E. coli-O. anthropi LPS hybrid aggregates. Although Ochrobactrum was sensitive to polymyxin, self-promoted uptake and bacterial lysis occurred without OM morphological changes, suggesting an unusual OM structural rigidity. Ochrobactrum and B. abortus LPSs showed no differences in phosphate, qualitative fatty acid composition, or acyl chain fluidity. However, Ochrobactrum LPS, but not B. abortus LPS, contained galacturonic acid. B. abortus and Ochrobactrum smooth LPS aggregates had similar size and zeta potential (-12 to -15 mV). Upon saturation with polymyxin, zeta potential became positive (1 mV) for Ochrobactrum smooth LPS while remaining negative (-5 mV) for B. abortus smooth LPS, suggesting hindered access to inner targets. These results show that although Ochrobactrum and Brucella share a basic OM pattern, subtle modifications in LPS core cause markedly different OM properties, possibly reflecting the adaptive evolution of B. abortus to pathogenicity.
Notes:
1999
 
PMID 
C M Marín, E Moreno, I Moriyón, R Díaz, J M Blasco (1999)  Performance of competitive and indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, gel immunoprecipitation with native hapten polysaccharide, and standard serological tests in diagnosis of sheep brucellosis.   Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 6: 2. 269-272 Mar  
Abstract: Competitive and standard enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs), rose bengal (RB), complement fixation, and agar gel immunoprecipitation with native hapten (AGID-NH) were compared by using sera from Brucella-free, Brucella melitensis-infected, and B. melitensis Rev1-vaccinated sheep. The most sensitive tests were indirect ELISA and RB, and the most specific tests were AGID-NH and competitive ELISA. We show that RB followed by AGID-NH is a simple and effective system for diagnosing sheep brucellosis.
Notes:
 
PMID 
M Skurnik, R Venho, J A Bengoechea, I Moriyón (1999)  The lipopolysaccharide outer core of Yersinia enterocolitica serotype O:3 is required for virulence and plays a role in outer membrane integrity.   Mol Microbiol 31: 5. 1443-1462 Mar  
Abstract: Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of Yersinia enterocolitica O:3 has an inner core linked to both the O-antigen and to an outer core hexasaccharide that forms a branch. The biological role of the outer core was studied using polar and non-polar mutants of the outer core biosynthetic operon. Analysis of O-antigen- and outer core-deficient strains suggested a critical role for the outer core in outer membrane properties relevant in resistance to antimicrobial peptides and permeability to hydrophobic agents, and indirectly relevant in resistance to killing by normal serum. Wild-type bacteria but not outer core mutants killed intragastrically infected mice, and the intravenous lethal dose was approximately 10(4)-fold higher for outer core mutants. After intragastric infection, outer core mutants colonized Peyer's patches and invaded mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen and liver, and induced protective immunity against wild-type bacteria. In mice co-infected intragastrically with an outer core mutant-wild type mixture, both strains colonized Peyer's patches similarly during the first 2 days, but the mutant was much less efficient in colonizing deeper organs and was cleared faster from Peyer's patches. The results demonstrate that outer core is required for Y. enterocolitica O:3 full virulence, and strongly suggest that it provides resistance against defence mechanisms (most probably those involving bactericidal peptides).
Notes:
 
PMID 
E Freer, J Pizarro-Cerdá, A Weintraub, J A Bengoechea, I Moriyón, K Hultenby, J P Gorvel, E Moreno (1999)  The outer membrane of Brucella ovis shows increased permeability to hydrophobic probes and is more susceptible to cationic peptides than are the outer membranes of mutant rough Brucella abortus strains.   Infect Immun 67: 11. 6181-6186 Nov  
Abstract: The permeability of the outer membrane (OM) to hydrophobic probes and its susceptibility to bactericidal cationic peptides were investigated for natural rough Brucella ovis and for mutant rough Brucella abortus strains. The OM of B. ovis displayed an abrupt and faster kinetic profile than rough B. abortus during the uptake of the hydrophobic probe N-phenyl-naphthylamine. B. ovis was more sensitive than rough B. abortus to the action of cationic peptides. Bactenecins 5 and 7 induced morphological alterations on the OMs of both rough Brucella strains. B. ovis lipopolysaccharide (LPS) captured considerably more polymyxin B than LPSs from both rough and smooth B. abortus strains. Polymyxin B, poly-L-lysine, and poly-L-ornithine produced a thick coating on the surfaces of both strains, which was more evident in B. ovis than in rough B. abortus. The distinct functional properties of the OMs of these two rough strains correlate with some structural differences of their OMs and with their different biological behaviors in animals and culture cells.
Notes:
1998
 
PMID 
J Velasco, H Moll, Y A Knirel, V Sinnwell, I Moriyón, U Zähringer (1998)  Structural studies on the lipopolysaccharide from a rough strain of Ochrobactrum anthropi containing a 2,3-diamino-2,3-dideoxy-D-glucose disaccharide lipid A backbone.   Carbohydr Res 306: 1-2. 283-290 Jan  
Abstract: A degradation protocol using de-O-acylation and subsequent alkaline de-N-acylation was applied to the lipopolysaccharide of Ochrobactrum anthropi rough strain LMG 3301. Three main oligosaccharide bisphosphates containing core-lipid A backbone structures were obtained after fractionation by anion-exchange HPLC. Using 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy, including two-dimensional COSY, TOCSY, and NOE spectroscopy (ROESY and NOESY), the following structures were established: [formula: see text] where Kdo is 3-deoxy-D-manno-octulosonic acid, D-GlcN3N is 2,3-diamino-2,3-dideoxy-D- glucose and R is H or alpha-D-GalpA or 4-deoxy-beta-L-threo-hex-4-enopyranuronic acid, the latter sugar being derived from alpha-D-GalpA by beta-elimination of a substituent attached to 0-4. This is the first report on the isolation from a lipopolysaccharide of an oligosaccharide containing GlcN3N in the lipid A backbone [beta-D-GlcpN3N4P-(1-->6)-alpha-D-GlcpN3N1 P]. Sugar and methylation analysis confirmed the presence of the GalA-->Kdo disaccharide and non-stoichiometric substitution of GalA. It is suggested that Glc is the substituent at 0-4 in GalA and that in the non-degraded lipopolysaccharide the amino group of GlcN is not acylated.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J A Bengoechea, B Lindner, U Seydel, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1998)  Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia pestis are more resistant to bactericidal cationic peptides than Yersinia enterocolitica.   Microbiology 144 ( Pt 6): 1509-1515 Jun  
Abstract: The action of bactericidal polycationic peptides was compared in Yersinia spp. by testing peptide binding to live cells and changes in outer membrane (OM) morphology and permeability. Moreover, polycation interaction with LPS was studied by measuring the dependence of dansylcadaverine displacement and zeta potential on polycation concentration. When growth at 37 degrees C, Yersinia pestis and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis bound less polymyxin B (PMB) than pathogenic or non-pathogenic Yersinia enterocolitica, regardless of virulence plasmid expression. Y. pseudotuberculosis OMs were unharmed by PMB concentrations causing extensive OM blebbing in Y. enterocolitica. The permeability to lysozyme caused by PMB was greater in Y. enterocolitica than in Y. pseudotuberculosis or Y. pestis and differences increased at 37 degrees C. Similar observations were made with other polycations using a polymyxin/novobiocin permeability assay. With LPS of cells grown at 26 degrees C, polycation binding was highest for Y. pseudotuberculosis and lowest for Y. pestis, with Y. enterocolitica yielding intermediate results which were lower for pathogenic than for non-pathogenic strains. With LPS of cells grown at 37 degrees C, polycation binding remained unchanged for Y. pestis and pathogenic Y. enterocolitica, increased for non-pathogenic Y. enterocolitica and decreased for Y. pseudotuberculosis to Y. pestis levels. Polycation binding related in part to differences in charge density (zeta potential) of LPS aggregates, suggesting similar effects at bacterial surfaces. It is suggested that species and temperature differences in polycation resistance relate to infection route, invasiveness and intracellular multiplication of Yersinia spp.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Sola-Landa, J Pizarro-Cerdá, M J Grilló, E Moreno, I Moriyón, J M Blasco, J P Gorvel, I López-Goñi (1998)  A two-component regulatory system playing a critical role in plant pathogens and endosymbionts is present in Brucella abortus and controls cell invasion and virulence.   Mol Microbiol 29: 1. 125-138 Jul  
Abstract: Two mutants showing increased sensitivity to polycations and surfactants were obtained by transposon mutagenesis of virulent Brucella abortus 2308 Nalr. These mutants showed no obvious in vitro growth defects and produced smooth-type lipopolysaccharides. However, they hardly multiplied or persisted in mouse spleens, displayed reduced invasiveness in macrophages and HeLa cells, lost the ability to inhibit lysosome fusion and were unable to replicate intracellularly. Subsequent DNA analyses identified a two-component regulatory system [Brucella virulence related (Bvr)] with a regulatory (BvrR) and sensory (BvrS) protein. Cloning of bvrR in the BvrR-deficient mutant restored the resistance to polycations and, in part, the invasiveness and the ability to multiply intracellularly. BvrR and BvrS were highly similar (87-89% and 70-80% respectively) to the regulatory and sensory proteins of the chromosomally encoded Rhizobium meliloti Chvl-ExoS and Agrobacterium tumefaciens Chvl-ChvG systems previously shown to be critical for endosymbiosis and pathogenicity in plants. Divergence among the three sensory proteins was located mostly within a periplasmic domain probably involved in stimulus sensing. As B. abortus, R. meliloti and A. tumefaciens are phylogenetically related, these observations suggest that these systems have a common ancestor that has evolved to sense stimuli in plant and animal microbial environments.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J A Bengoechea, K Brandenburg, U Seydel, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1998)  Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia pestis show increased outer membrane permeability to hydrophobic agents which correlates with lipopolysaccharide acyl-chain fluidity.   Microbiology 144 ( Pt 6): 1517-1526 Jun  
Abstract: The hydrophobic probe N-phenyl-1-naphthylamine accumulated less in non-pathogenic Yersinia spp. and non-pathogenic and pathogenic Yersinia enterocolitica than in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis or Yersinia pestis. This was largely due to differences in the activity of efflux systems, but also to differences in outer membrane permeability because uptake of the probe in KCN/arsenate-poisoned cells was slower in the former group than in Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. pestis. The probe accumulation rate was higher in Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. pestis grown at 37 degrees C than at 26 degrees C and was always highest in Y. pestis. These yersiniae had LPSs with shorter polysaccharides than Y. enterocolitica, particularly when grown at 37 degrees C. Gel<-->liquid-crystalline phase transitions (Tc 28-31 degrees C) were observed in LPS aggregates of Y. enterocolitica grown at 26 and 37 degrees C, with no differences between non-pathogenic and pathogenic strains. Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. pestis LPSs showed no phase transitions and, although the fluidity of LPSs of Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. enterocolitica grown at 26 degrees C were close below the Tc of the latter, they were always in a more fluid state than Y. enterocolitica LPS. Comparison with previous studies of Salmonella choleraesuis subsp. choleraesuis serotype minnesota rough LPS showed that the increased fluidity and absence of transition of Y. pseudotuberculosis and Y. pestis LPSs cannot be explained by their shorter polysaccharides and suggested differences at the lipid A/core level. It is proposed that differences in LPS-LPS interactions and efflux activity explain the above observations and reflect the adaptation of Yersinia spp. to different habitats.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Velasco, C Romero, I López-Goñi, J Leiva, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1998)  Evaluation of the relatedness of Brucella spp. and Ochrobactrum anthropi and description of Ochrobactrum intermedium sp. nov., a new species with a closer relationship to Brucella spp.   Int J Syst Bacteriol 48 Pt 3: 759-768 Jul  
Abstract: The relatedness of Brucella spp. and Ochrobactrum anthropi was studied by protein profiling, Western blot, immunoelectrophoresis and 16S rRNA analysis. Whole-cell and soluble proteins of brucellae and O. anthropi showed serological cross-reactivities quantitatively and qualitatively more intense than those existing with similar extracts of Agrobacterium spp. Numerical analysis of Western blot profiles of whole-cell extracts showed that O. anthropi LMG 3301 was closer to Brucella spp. than to O. anthropi LMG 3331T, a result not obtained by protein profiling. These differences were not observed by Western blot with soluble fractions, and immunoelectrophoretic analyses suggested that this was due to destruction of conformational epitopes in Western blot procedures with the subsequent simplification of antigenic profile. Analysis of the 16S rRNA sequences of strains previously used in the species definition confirmed that strain LMG 3301, and also LMG 3306, were closer to the brucellae, and that LMG 3331T was in a separate cluster. The LMG 3301 and the LMG 3331T clusters could also be separated by their different colistin sensitivity and by PCR with 16S rRNA Brucella primers, and both methods showed strains of both clusters among clinical isolates classified as O. anthropi by conventional tests. These results and those of previous DNA-DNA hybridization studies [Holmes, B., Popoff, M., Kiredjian, M. & Kersters, K. (1988). Int J Syst Bacteriol 38, 406-416] show that the LMG 3301 cluster and related clinical isolates should be given a new species status for which the name Ochrobactrum intermedium sp. nov. is proposed (type strain is LMG 3301T=NCTC 12171T = CNS 2-75T).
Notes:
 
PMID 
I Moriyón, I López-Goñi (1998)  Structure and properties of the outer membranes of Brucella abortus and Brucella melitensis.   Int Microbiol 1: 1. 19-26 Mar  
Abstract: The brucellae are Gram-negative bacteria characteristically able to multiply facultatively within phagocytic cells and which cause a zoonosis of world-wide importance. This article reviews the structure and topology of the main components (lipopolysaccharide, native hapten polysaccharide, free lipids and proteins) of the outer membranes of Brucella abortus and B. melitensis, as well as some distinctive properties (permeability and interactions with cationic peptides) of these membranes. On these data, an outer membrane model is proposed in which, as compared to other Gram-negatives, there is a stronger hydrophobic anchorage for the lipopolysaccharide, free lipids, porin proteins and lipoproteins, and a reduced surface density of anionic groups, which could be partially or totally neutralized by ornithine lipids. This model accounts for the permeability of Brucella to hydrophobic permeants and for its resistance to the bactericidal oxygen-independent systems of phagocytes.
Notes:
 
PMID 
C M Marín, B Alonso-Urmeneta, I Moriyón, S Pérez-Gómez, J M Blasco (1998)  Comparison of polyclonal, monoclonal and protein G peroxidase conjugates in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the diagnosis of Brucella ovis in sheep.   Vet Rec 143: 14. 390-394 Oct  
Abstract: The sensitivities of three commercial peroxidase conjugates (polyclonal anti-sheep IgG, recombinant protein G and a monoclonal anti-ruminant IgG1) in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for Brucella ovis were evaluated. The monoclonal and protein G conjugates reduced, but did not totally remove, the characteristic background reactivity observed with the sera from brucella-free sheep. The protein G conjugate provided the best sensitivity, similar to that obtained with the classical gel diffusion test. Both tests were highly specific when testing sera from brucella-free animals but detected as positive a large proportion of sera from both Brucella melitensis-infected and B melitensis Rev 1-vaccinated sheep.
Notes:
 
PMID 
B Alonso-Urmeneta, C Marín, V Aragón, J M Blasco, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1998)  Evaluation of lipopolysaccharides and polysaccharides of different epitopic structures in the indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for diagnosis of brucellosis in small ruminants and cattle.   Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 5: 6. 749-754 Nov  
Abstract: Brucella abortus and Brucella melitensis have surface lipopolysaccharides and polysaccharides carrying B. melitensis-type (M) and B. abortus-type (A) epitopes as well as common (C) epitopes present in all smooth Brucella biotypes. Crude lipopolysaccharides, hydrolytic O polysaccharides, and native hapten polysaccharides of MC or AC specificity were evaluated in indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays with polyclonal, monoclonal, or protein G conjugates by using sera from cattle, sheep, and goats infected with AC, MC, or AMC Brucella biotypes. Regardless of the antigen, the levels of antibodies were lower in goats than in sheep and highest in cattle. The diagnostic performance of the assay was not affected by the absence of lipid A-core epitopes, the presence of contaminating outer membrane proteins, the AC or MC epitopic structure of the absorbed antigen, or the conjugate used. Moreover, with sera from cattle vaccinated with B. abortus S19 (AC) or from sheep and goats vaccinated with B. melitensis Rev 1 (MC), AC and MC antigens showed similar levels of reactivity. The results show that antibodies to the C epitopes largely dominate in infection, and this is consistent with the existence of multiple overlapping C epitopes (V. Weynants, D. Gilson, A. Cloeckaert, A. Tibor, P. A. Denoel, F. Godfroid, J. N. Limet, and J.-J. Letesson, Infect. Immun. 65:1939-1943, 1997) rather than with one or two C epitopes. It is concluded that, by adaptation to the corresponding antibody levels, brucellosis in cattle, sheep, and goats can be diagnosed by immunosorbent assay with a single combination of conjugate and antigen.
Notes:
1997
 
PMID 
J Velasco, R Díaz, M J Grilló, M Barberán, C Marín, J M Blasco, I Moriyón (1997)  Antibody and delayed-type hypersensitivity responses to Ochrobactrum anthropi cytosolic and outer membrane antigens in infections by smooth and rough Brucella spp.   Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 4: 3. 279-284 May  
Abstract: Immunological cross-reactions between Brucella spp. and Ochrobactrum anthropi were investigated in animals and humans naturally infected by Brucella spp. and in experimentally infected rams (Brucella ovis infected), rabbits (Brucella melitensis infected), and mice (B. melitensis and Brucella abortus infected). In the animals tested, O. anthropi cytosolic proteins evoked a delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction of a frequency and intensity similar to that observed with B. melitensis brucellin. O. anthropi cytosolic proteins also reacted in gel precipitation tests with antibodies in sera from Brucella natural hosts with a frequency similar to that observed with B. melitensis proteins, and absorption experiments and immunoblotting showed antibodies to both Brucella-specific proteins and proteins common to Brucella and O. anthropi. No antibodies to O. anthropi cytosolic proteins were detected in the sera of Brucella-free hosts. Immunoblotting with sera of Brucella-infected sheep and goats showed immunoglobulin G (IgG) to Brucella group 3 outer membrane proteins and to O. anthropi proteins of similar molecular weight. No IgG to the O-specific polysaccharide of O. anthropi lipopolysaccharide was detected in the sera of Brucella-infected hosts. The sera of sheep, goats, and rabbits infected with B. melitensis contained IgG to O. anthropi rough lipopolysaccharide and lipid A, and B. ovis and O. anthropi rough lipopolysaccharides showed equal reactivities with IgG in the sera of B. ovis-infected rams. The findings show that the immunoresponse of Brucella-infected hosts to protein antigens is not necessarily specific for brucellae and suggest that the presence of O. anthropi or some related bacteria explains the previously described reactivities to Brucella rough lipopolysaccharide and outer membrane proteins in healthy animals.
Notes:
1996
 
PMID 
V Aragón, R Díaz, E Moreno, I Moriyón (1996)  Characterization of Brucella abortus and Brucella melitensis native haptens as outer membrane O-type polysaccharides independent from the smooth lipopolysaccharide.   J Bacteriol 178: 4. 1070-1079 Feb  
Abstract: Brucella native haptens (NHs) extracted with hot water from smooth (S)-type B. abortus and B. melitensis were purified to high levels of serological activity and compared with the polysaccharide obtained by acid hydrolysis (PS) of the S lipopolysaccharide (S-LPS). By 13C nuclear magnetic resonance analysis, NHs showed the spectrum of a homopolymer of alpha-1,2- or alpha-1,2- plus alpha-1,3-linked 4-formamido-4,6-dideoxy-D-mannose (N-formylperosamine) previously reported for the LPS O chain. However, while PS contained up to 0.6% 3-deoxy-D-manno-2-octulosonate, this LPS-core marker was absent from NH. High performance liquid chromatography and thin-layer chromatography showed heterogeneity in NH purified from whole cells but not in PS. By immunoprecipitation, polysaccharides indistinguishable from NH were demonstrated in extracts obtained with phenol-water, saline at 60 degrees C, and ether-water treatments, and none of these treatments caused S-LPS hydrolysis detectable with antibodies to the O chain and lipid A. Two lines of evidence showed that NH was in the cell surface. First, NH became biotinylated when B. abortus live cells were labelled with biotin-hydrazide, and the examination of cell fractions and electron microscopy sections with streptavidin-peroxidase and streptavidin-coloidal gold, respectively, showed that labelling was extrinsic. Moreover, whereas only traces of NH were found in cytosols, the amount of NH was enriched in cell envelopes and in the outer membrane blebs spontaneously released by brucellae during growth. Interactions between NH and S-LPS were observed in crude cell extracts, and such interactions could be reconstituted by using purified NH and LPS. The results demonstrate that NH is not a hydrolytic product of S-LPS and suggest a model in which LPS-independent O-type polysaccharides (NH) are intertwined with the O chain in the outer membrane of S-type brucellae.
Notes:
 
PMID 
E Freer, E Moreno, I Moriyón, J Pizarro-Cerdá, A Weintraub, J P Gorvel (1996)  Brucella-Salmonella lipopolysaccharide chimeras are less permeable to hydrophobic probes and more sensitive to cationic peptides and EDTA than are their native Brucella sp. counterparts.   J Bacteriol 178: 20. 5867-5876 Oct  
Abstract: A rough (R) Brucella abortus 45/20 mutant was more sensitive to the bactericidal activity of polymyxin B and lactoferricin B than was its smooth (S) counterpart but considerably more resistant than Salmonella montevideo. The outer membrane (OM) and isolated lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of S. montevideo showed a higher affinity for these cationic peptides than did the corresponding B. abortus OM and LPS. We took advantage of the moderate sensitivity of R B. abortus to cationic peptides to construct live R B. abortus-S-LPS chimeras to test the activities of polymyxin B, lactoferricin B, and EDTA. Homogeneous and abundant peripheral distribution of the heterologous S-LPS was observed on the surface of the chimeras, and this coating had no effect on the viability or morphology of the cells. When the heterologous LPS corresponded to the less sensitive bacterium S B. abortus S19, the chimeras were more resistant to cationic peptides; in contrast, when the S-LPS was from the more sensitive bacterium S. montevideo, the chimeras were more susceptible to the action of peptides and EDTA. A direct correlation between the amount of heterologous S-LPS on the surface of chimeric Brucella cells and peptide sensitivity was observed. Whereas the damage produced by polymyxin B in S. montevideo and B. abortus-S. montevideo S-LPS chimeras was manifested mainly as OM blebbing and inner membrane rolling, lactoferricin B caused inner membrane detachment, vacuolization, and the formation of internal electron-dense granules in these cells. Native S and R B. abortus strains were permeable to the hydrophobic probe N-phenyl-1-naphthylamine (NPN). In contrast, only reduced amounts of NPN partitioned into the OMs of the S. montevideo and B. abortus-S. montevideo S-LPS chimeras. Following peptide exposure, accelerated NPN uptake similar to that observed for S. montevideo was detected for the B. abortus-S. montevideo LPS chimeras. The partition of NPN into native or EDTA-, polymyxin B-, or lactoferricin B-treated LPS micelles of S. montevideo or B. abortus mimicked the effects observed with intact cells, and this was confirmed by using micelle hybrids of B. abortus and S. montevideo LPSs. The results showed that LPS is the main cause of B. abortus' resistance to bactericidal cationic peptides, the OM-disturbing action of divalent cationic chelants, and OM permeability to hydrophobic substances. It is proposed that these three features are related to the ability of Brucella bacteria to multiply within phagocytes.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J A Bengoechea, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1996)  Outer membrane differences between pathogenic and environmental Yersinia enterocolitica biogroups probed with hydrophobic permeants and polycationic peptides.   Infect Immun 64: 12. 4891-4899 Dec  
Abstract: Sensitivities to polycationic peptides and EDTA were compared in Yersinia enterocolitica pathogenic and environmental biogroups. As shown by changes in permeability to the fluorescent hydrophobic probe N-phenylnaphthylamine (NPN), the outer membranes (OMs) of pathogenic and environmental strains grown at 26 degrees C in standard broth were more resistant to poly-L-lysine, poly-L-ornithine, melittin, cecropin P1, polymyxin B, and EDTA than Escherichia coli OMs. At 37 degrees C, OMs of pathogenic biogroups were resistant to EDTA and polycations and OMs of environmental strains were resistant to EDTA whereas E. coli OMs were sensitive to both EDTA and polycations. Similar results were found when testing deoxycholate sensitivity after polycation exposure or when isogenic pairs with or without virulence plasmid pYV were compared. With bacteria grown without Ca++ available, OM permeability to NPN was drastically increased in pathogenic but not in environmental strains or E. coli. Under these conditions, OMs of pYV+ and pYV- cells showed small differences in NPN permeability but differences in polycation sensitivity could not be detected by fluorimetry. O:1,6 (environmental type) lipopolysaccharide (LPS), but not O:3 or O:8 LPS, was markedly rough at 37 degrees C, and this could explain the differences in polycation sensitivity. LPSs from serotypes O:3 and O:8 grown at 37 degrees C were more permeable to NPN than O:1,6 LPS, and O:8 LPS was resistant to polycation-induced permeabilization. These data suggest that LPSs relate to some but not all the OM differences described. It is hypothesized that the different OM properties of environmental and pathogenic biogroups reflect the adaptation of the latter biogroups to pathogenicity.
Notes:
1995
 
PMID 
G Martínez de Tejada, J Pizarro-Cerdá, E Moreno, I Moriyón (1995)  The outer membranes of Brucella spp. are resistant to bactericidal cationic peptides.   Infect Immun 63: 8. 3054-3061 Aug  
Abstract: The actions of polymyxin B, rabbit polymorphonuclear lysosome extracts, 14 polycationic peptides (including defensin NP-2, cecropin P1, lactoferricin B, and active peptides from cationic protein 18 and bactenecin), EDTA, and Tris on Brucella spp. were studied, with other gram-negative bacteria as controls. Brucella spp. were comparatively resistant to all of the agents listed above and bound less polymyxin B, and their outer membranes (OMs) were neither morphologically altered nor permeabilized to lysozyme by polymyxin B concentrations, although both effects were observed for controls. EDTA and peptides increased or accelerated the partition of the hydrophobic probe N-phenyl-naphthylamine into Escherichia coli and Haemophilus influenzae OMs but had no effect on Brucella OMs. Since Brucella and H. influenzae OMs are permeable to hydrophobic compounds (G. Martínez de Tejada and I. Moriyón, J. Bacteriol. 175:5273-5275, 1993), the results show that such unusual permeability is not necessarily related to resistance to polycations. Although rough (R) B. abortus and B. ovis were more resistant than the controls were, there were qualitative and quantitative differences with smooth (S) brucellae; this may explain known host range and virulence differences. Brucella S-lipopolysaccharides (LPSs) had reduced affinities for polycations, and insertion of Brucella and Salmonella montevideo S-LPSs into the OM of a Brucella R-LPS mutant increased and decreased, respectively, its resistance to cationic peptides. The results show that the core lipid A of Brucella LPS plays a major role in polycation resistance and that O-chain density also contributes significantly. It is proposed that the features described above contribute to Brucella resistance to the oxygen-independent systems of phagocytes.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Ficapal, B Alonso-Urmeneta, J Velasco, I Moriyón, J M Blasco (1995)  Diagnosis of Brucella ovis infection of rams with an ELISA using protein G as conjugate.   Vet Rec 137: 6. 145-147 Aug  
Abstract: The complement fixation and gel diffusion tests for Brucella ovis ram epididymitis were compared with an indirect ELISA using antigens from B ovis extracted in hot saline, rough B ovis lipopolysaccharide or a cytosolic fraction of rough B melitensis 115, and commercial anti-IgG (heavy and light chain specificity) or protein G conjugates. None of the antigens and conjugates used in the ELISA gave better results in terms of sensitivity and specificity than the complement fixation or the gel diffusion tests with the sera of 41 rams naturally infected with B ovis, 17 rams inoculated conjunctivally with B ovis and 53 Brucella-free rams. The protein G conjugate significantly reduced the background reactivity of the sera from the Brucella-free rams but did not improve the sensitivity of the ELISA with the anti-IgG conjugate.
Notes:
1994
 
PMID 
E Díaz-Aparicio, C Marín, B Alonso-Urmeneta, V Aragón, S Pérez-Ortiz, M Pardo, J M Blasco, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1994)  Evaluation of serological tests for diagnosis of Brucella melitensis infection of goats.   J Clin Microbiol 32: 5. 1159-1165 May  
Abstract: Five serological assays were evaluated for the diagnosis of brucellosis in goats: the rose bengal test (RBT), complement fixation test (CFT), radial immunodiffusion (RID) with Brucella and Yersinia enterocolitica O:9 polysaccharides, counterimmunoelectrophoresis (CIEP) with cytosol, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with polyclonal and protein G conjugates and smooth lipopolysaccharide (S-LPS), native hapten polysaccharide (NH), or cytosol antigens. For optimal sensitivity, RBT had to be used with sera-antigen at a 3:1 dilution. In the RID test, Brucella melitensis biotype 1 NH could not be replaced by Brucella abortus biotype 1 or Y. enterocolitica 0:9 polysaccharides. In the ELISA, S-LPS and NH gave similar results and the protein G conjugate increased the specificity. With the sera from 55 B. melitensis culture-positive goats, the sensitivity was 100% for RBT, CFT (titer > or = 4), and ELISA with S-LPS or NH; 94% for RID; and 93% for CIEP. All tests were negative (100% specific) when testing the sera from 127 brucella-free goats. Larger discrepancies among the results of the serological tests were obtained with sera from goats of areas where brucellosis is endemic. When the sera of 20 young goats vaccinated subcutaneously (10(9) CFU of B. melitensis Rev 1) and bled 6 months later were examined, the specificities were as follows: NH ELISA, 60%; CFT and S-LPS ELISA, 75%; RBT, 80%; CIEP, 90%; and RID, 94%. With the sera from 10 young goats vaccinated conjunctivally (10(9) CFU of B. melitensis Rev 1) all tests were 100% specific 4 months after vaccination. The proportion of goats giving a positive reaction after vaccination decreased faster in RID than in other tests.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J M Blasco, C Marín, M Jiménez de Bagués, M Barberán, A Hernández, L Molina, J Velasco, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1994)  Evaluation of allergic and serological tests for diagnosing Brucella melitensis infection in sheep.   J Clin Microbiol 32: 8. 1835-1840 Aug  
Abstract: A total of 291 unvaccinated sheep from Brucella melitenesis-infected flocks were examined for delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses with Brucellergene commercial allergen and with cold saline extract and cytosol from rough B. melitensis 115, and their sera were tested in the rose bengal test (RBT), complement fixation test (CFT), and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with lipopolysaccharide. DTH reactions were maximal after 72 h, with no intensity differences among allergens, inoculation sites (eyelid and tail), and doses tested. There were no differences in the results recorded by visual inspection and palpation of inoculation sites, by measuring skin thickness with a caliper, or by microscopic examination of samples taken at necropsy. Six days after DTH testing, energy was observed in 100% of the animals, and 100% reactivity was recovered only after 24 days. All animals were necropsied, and thorough bacteriological searches were performed. The sensitivities found with the 140 animals from which B. melitensis was isolated were ELISA, 100%; DTH, 97.1%; RBT, 92.1%; and CFT, 88.6%. Those results put into question the value of RBT and CFT as screening and confirmatory tests for sheep brucellosis and at least indicate that their standardization should be modified. For 151 tested sheep from which B. melitensis was not isolated, the percentages of positive animals were ELISA, 100%; DTH, 94.0%; RBT, 57.6%; and CFT, 53.6%. All tests were negative for 100 tested sheep from Brucella-free flocks. The different results of bacteriological and immunological tests suggest the usefulness of developing indirect tests able to distinguish truly infected animals from those that have developed an immunological response.
Notes:
1993
 
PMID 
J M Blasco, C Gamazo, A J Winter, M P Jiménez de Bagüés, C Marín, M Barberán, I Moriyón, B Alonso-Urmeneta, R Díaz (1993)  Evaluation of whole cell and subcellular vaccines against Brucella ovis in rams.   Vet Immunol Immunopathol 37: 3-4. 257-270 Aug  
Abstract: Five antigen preparations from Brucella ovis strain REO 198 were incorporated with the pluronic polymer L-121 and muramyl dipeptide and tested as vaccines against B. ovis infection of rams. The antigenic preparations were: (1) a fraction enriched in outer membrane proteins and rough lipopolysaccharide (hot saline extract, HS); (2) the proteins from HS substantially free of lipopolysaccharide; (3) outer membrane blebs; (4) outer membrane-peptidoglycan complexes extracted with detergent; (5) killed whole cells. The experimental vaccines were compared with two standard vaccines, rough Brucella abortus 45/20 whole killed cells in an oil based adjuvant, and live Brucella melitensis Rev 1. Immunizations with non-living vaccines were performed on two occasions, 18 weeks apart. The rams were challenged with a virulent strain of B. ovis 31 weeks after the second vaccination and slaughtered 15 weeks thereafter. Rates of infection in groups vaccinated with Rev 1 (33%), and HS (40%) were significantly lower (P < 0.005 and P < 0.025, respectively) than that in the non-vaccinated control group (87%). Strain 45/20 was the only other vaccine that conferred a significant level of protection (50%) (P < 0.05). The organ distribution of the infection and the level of colonization of infected organs did not differ significantly between infected animals in the various vaccine groups and those in the unvaccinated control group. No statistically significant relationship was detected between the magnitude of the antibody responses to the HS extract, to outer membrane proteins, or to the rough lipopolysaccharide, and freedom from infection. The results indicate that the HS extract of B. ovis may represent a useful alternative to B. melitensis Rev 1 or B. abortus 45/20 as a vaccine against B. ovis.
Notes:
 
PMID 
G Martínez de Tejada, I Moriyón (1993)  The outer membranes of Brucella spp. are not barriers to hydrophobic permeants.   J Bacteriol 175: 16. 5273-5275 Aug  
Abstract: The patterns of susceptibility to hydrophobic and hydrophilic drugs and the uptake of the fluorescent probe N-phenyl-naphthylamine in Brucella spp., Haemophilus influenzae, Escherichia coli, and deep rough Salmonella minnesota mutants were compared. The results show that the outer membranes of smooth and naturally rough Brucella spp. do not represent barriers to hydrophobic permeants and that this absence of a barrier relates at least in part to the properties of Brucella lipopolysaccharide.
Notes:
 
PMID 
E Díaz-Aparicio, V Aragón, C Marín, B Alonso, M Font, E Moreno, S Pérez-Ortiz, J M Blasco, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1993)  Comparative analysis of Brucella serotype A and M and Yersinia enterocolitica O:9 polysaccharides for serological diagnosis of brucellosis in cattle, sheep, and goats.   J Clin Microbiol 31: 12. 3136-3141 Dec  
Abstract: Hapten polysaccharides of Brucella smooth M and A serotypes were prepared from Brucella sp. and Yersinia enterocolitica O:9 by previously described hydrolytic (O chain) or nonhydrolytic (native hapten [NH]) procedures. The purified polysaccharides differed only in the presence (O chain) or absence (NH) of lipopolysaccharide core sugars. The polysaccharides were compared by reverse radial immunodiffusion for the diagnosis of brucellosis in cattle (Brucella abortus biotype 1 [A serotype] and Brucella melitensis biotype 3 [AM serotype]), sheep (B. melitensis biotypes 1 [M serotype] and 3), and goats (B. melitensis biotype 1). The reverse radial immunodiffusion test with the NH from B. melitensis 16 M (serotype M) showed the highest sensitivity (89.6 to 97.3%), regardless of the host species and the serotype of the infecting Brucella sp. Y. enterocolitica O:9 NH (A serotype) was useful for diagnosing disease in cattle infected with B. abortus biotype 1, but not in cattle infected with B. melitensis biotype 3, sheep, or goats. The different results obtained with the serotype M and A polysaccharides and the sera from animals infected with M, A, and AM serotypes of Brucella spp. showed that in naturally infected animals, a large proportion of the antibodies are directed to or react with a previously defined common epitope(s) (J. T. Douglas and D. A. Palmer, J. Clin. Microbiol. 26:1353-1356, 1988) different from the A or M epitopes. By using the radial immunodiffusion test with B. melitensis 16M NH, it was possible to differentiate infected from vaccinated cattle, sheep, and goats with a sensitivity and specificity similar to that of the complement fixation test.
Notes:
 
PMID 
C Gamazo, A I Vitas, I López-Goñi, R Díaz, I Moriyón (1993)  Factors affecting detection of Brucella melitensis by BACTEC NR730, a nonradiometric system for hemocultures.   J Clin Microbiol 31: 12. 3200-3203 Dec  
Abstract: The detection of Brucella bacteremia by subculture does not always correlate with a positive signal in the BACTEC NR730 nonradiometric system (Becton Dickinson Diagnostic Instrument Systems, Sparks, Md.). The effect of the inoculum size, pH, sodium polyanetholesulfonate, carbon sources (i-erythritol, sodium pyruvate, monosodium glutamate, D-glucose, and L-alanine), and urea in the release of CO2 was evaluated by using the reference strain Brucella melitensis 16M. In standard NR6 vials with or without blood, inocula 5 to 10 times larger (at least 265 CFU per vial) than those usually found in the blood of patients with brucellosis were necessary to produce a positive growth value (GV) in 4 days or less, and similar results were obtained with vials supplemented with the substrates listed above. GVs were consistently lower in vials with sodium polyanetholesulfonate than in vials without this agent. Vials with no blood inoculated with 265 CFU per vial showed turbidity 1 day before GVs became positive, proving that the major limiting detection factor was the low level of release of CO2 and not an inadequate growth medium. In NR6 vials buffered to pH 6.2, GVs became positive faster and were higher than those in standard vials. NR6 vials at pH 6.2 with 0.3% sodium pyruvate yielded a positive GV in the first day of bacterial turbidity.
Notes:
 
PMID 
C Gamazo, A I Vitas, I Moriyón, I López-Goñi, R Díaz (1993)  Brucella group 3 outer membrane proteins contain a heat-modifiable protein.   FEMS Microbiol Lett 112: 2. 141-146 Sep  
Abstract: Brucella melitensis and B. ovis outer membrane blebs contained a protein displaying a temperature-dependent molecular mass upshift from 25 kDa to 30 kDa. A fraction of the protein tightly bound to LPS did not show the molecular mass upshift which was also blocked by exposure of the protein to Zwittergent 314. The B. melitensis heat-modifiable protein and Escherichia coli OmpA shared antigenic determinants. These data indicate that the Brucella group 3 outer membrane proteins belonged to the OmpA family of proteins.
Notes:
1992
 
PMID 
M P Jiménez de Bagüés, C M Marín, J M Blasco, I Moriyón, C Gamazo (1992)  An ELISA with Brucella lipopolysaccharide antigen for the diagnosis of B. melitensis infection in sheep and for the evaluation of serological responses following subcutaneous or conjunctival B. melitensis strain Rev 1 vaccination.   Vet Microbiol 30: 2-3. 233-241 Feb  
Abstract: An indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with unpurified Brucella melitensis smooth lipopolysaccharide (S-LPS) as antigen was evaluated for the serological diagnosis of B. melitensis infection in sheep in comparison with the Rose Bengal (RB), complement fixation (CF), radial immunodiffusion (RID), microplate agglutination (MA) and rivanol agglutination (RIV) tests. Tests RB and CF detected as positive each of the 77 sera from B. melitensis-infected animals tested, the RID (74), MA (76) and the RIV (72) were less sensitive. However, all tests compared were negative when 77 sera from Brucella-free rams were tested. While subcutaneous Rev 1 vaccination induced high response levels in any of the tests, low level responses were obtained upon conjunctival vaccination, particularly in ELISA and RID tests.
Notes:
 
PMID 
I López-Goñi, I Moriyón, J B Neilands (1992)  Identification of 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid as a Brucella abortus siderophore.   Infect Immun 60: 11. 4496-4503 Nov  
Abstract: Brucella abortus grown in low-iron medium or in the presence of iron chelators [ethylenediamine-di(o-hydroxyphenylacetic acid) and 2,2-dipyridyl] showed reduced cell yields and released a material positive in chemical and biological assays for catechols. This material was purified from culture fluids of B. abortus 2308 by chromatography on agarose-iminodiacetic acid-Fe3+ and identified as 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid (2,3-DHBA) by thin-layer chromatography, paper electrophoresis, and UV-visible nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectroscopy. No other major catechols were observed at different stages of growth, and 2,3-DHBA was also produced upon iron limitation by representative strains of B. abortus biotypes 1, 5, 6, and 9. Both synthetic 2,3-DHBA and the natural catechol relieved the growth inhibition of B. abortus 2308 by ethylenediamine-di(o-hydroxyphenylacetic acid), and 2,3-DHBA promoted 55Fe uptake by B. abortus 2308 by an energy-dependent mechanism. Two other monocatechols tested, 2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl-Ser and 2,3-dihydroxybenzoyl-Gly, also promoted 55Fe uptake. More complex catechol siderophores (agrobactin and enterobactin), hydroxamate siderophores (aerobactin, ferrichrome, and deferriferrioxamine mesylate [Desferal]), and an EDTA-related siderophore (rhizobactin) failed to mediate 55Fe uptake. B. abortus cells grown in low-iron medium or in medium with iron had similar rates of iron uptake when supplied with 55Fe-2,3-DHBA, and the release of 2,3-DHBA under iron starvation was not associated with the expression of new outer membrane proteins. These results suggest an uptake system in which only the synthesis of the siderophore is regulated by the iron available for growth.
Notes:
1990
 
PMID 
J I Riezu-Boj, I Moriyón, J M Blasco, C Gamazo, R Díaz (1990)  Antibody response to Brucella ovis outer membrane proteins in ovine brucellosis.   Infect Immun 58: 2. 489-494 Feb  
Abstract: Hot saline extracts of Brucella ovis were composed of vesicles with outer membrane proteins (OMPs), lipopolysaccharide, and phospholipid as constituents. Extraction with petroleum ether-chloroform-phenol yielded a protein fraction free of detectable lipopolysaccharide, in which group 3 OMPs (28,500 apparent molecular weight [28.5K], 27.0K, and 25.5K) represented 81% of the total. Group 1 OMPs and 67.0K, 22.5K to 21.5K, and 19.5K to 18.0K proteins were also detected. Adsorption of immune sera with whole bacteria suggested that group 3 OMPs and 67.0K, 22.5K to 21.5K, and 19.5K to 18.0K proteins had antigenic determinants exposed on the surfaces of both B. ovis and rough B. melitensis cells but not on smooth B. melitensis cells. Antibodies to group 3 OMPs and the 67.0K protein in the sera of 93 and 87%, respectively, of B. ovis-infected rams were found by immunoblotting. Antibodies to other proteins were present in 67% of these animals. Compared with B. ovis-infected rams which had not developed lesions, rams with epididymo-orchitis had antibodies to a larger variety of proteins. Although ewes infected with B. melitensis also showed antibodies to OMPs, the immunoblot reactions were less intense.
Notes:
1989
 
PMID 
C Gamazo, A J Winter, I Moriyón, J I Riezu-Boj, J M Blasco, R Díaz (1989)  Comparative analyses of proteins extracted by hot saline or released spontaneously into outer membrane blebs from field strains of Brucella ovis and Brucella melitensis.   Infect Immun 57: 5. 1419-1426 May  
Abstract: Sheep infected with Brucella ovis produce antibody responses to the rough lipopolysaccharide and to proteins present in hot saline (HS) extracts of B. ovis (J. I. Riezu-Boj, I. Moriyón, J. M. Blasco, C. M. Marín, and R. Díaz, J. Clin. Microbiol. 23:938-942, 1986). The distribution and antigenic relatedness of proteins in HS extracts and in outer membrane blebs were established by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting for 41 strains of B. ovis and 26 strains of Brucella melitensis of diverse geographic origin. Five major groups of proteins were identified in HS extracts of B. ovis that had been freed of rough lipopolysaccharide: proteins of 43 kilodaltons (kDa), group A (25.5 to 32.0 kDa), group B (21.5 to 22.5 kDa); group C (18.0 to 19.5 kDa), and group D (13.0 to 15.5 kDa). Group A, B, C, and D proteins were also present in blebs. The profiles of proteins in HS extracts or blebs from strains of both Brucella species were very similar. Cross-reactions were demonstrated among HS extracts and blebs of all strains tested in immunoblots performed with an antiserum against the HS extract of a reference strain of B. ovis. Evidence was also provided of an antigenic relationship between group 3 proteins of the outer membrane and some of the proteins in groups A, B, and C. The conservation of these antigens and their immunogenicity in infected animals provide promise that they may serve as components of an effective subcellular vaccine for ovine brucellosis.
Notes:
 
PMID 
C M Marín, M P Jiménez de Bagués, J M Blasco, C Gamazo, I Moriyón, R Díaz (1989)  Comparison of three serological tests for Brucella ovis infection of rams using different antigenic extracts.   Vet Rec 125: 20. 504-508 Nov  
Abstract: The sensitivity and specificity of the complement fixation, gel diffusion and ELISA tests for the diagnosis of Brucella ovis infection of rams have been compared using three different antigenic preparations. The antigens obtained by petroleum ether - chloroform - phenol, or cold saline extractions gave poorer diagnostic results than those obtained by hot saline extraction in all the tests. The best sensitivity was obtained with the ELISA (97.6 per cent) followed by the gel diffusion (96.4 per cent) and complement fixation tests (92.7 per cent). The gel diffusion test detected as positive the two rams negative in the ELISA, while the complement fixation test did not improve the sensitivity of the other tests. Under these conditions all the tests were 100 per cent specific when testing sera from rams free of B ovis.
Notes:
1988
 
PMID 
M J Gómez-Miguel, I Moriyón, B Alonso-Urmeneta, J I Riezu-Boj, R Díaz (1988)  Serological response to the outer membrane lipoprotein in animal brucellosis.   Infect Immun 56: 3. 716-718 Mar  
Abstract: The presence of antibodies to Brucella outer membrane lipoprotein was investigated in cattle and rams. Low but significant amounts of antibody were detected in sera from B. abortus-infected cattle and from B. ovis-infected rams which had developed epididymitis. Strain-19-vaccinated cattle also showed a weak albeit transient antibody response.
Notes:
 
PMID 
B Alonso-Urmeneta, I Moriyón, R Díaz, J M Blasco (1988)  Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with Brucella native hapten polysaccharide and smooth lipopolysaccharide.   J Clin Microbiol 26: 12. 2642-2646 Dec  
Abstract: Brucella melitensis native haptens (NH) are polysaccharides identical to the O-side chain of the smooth lipopolysaccharide (S-LPS) (E. Moreno, H. Mayer, and I. Moriyón, Infect. Immun. 55:2850-2853, 1987) which precipitate with sera from infected cattle but not from strain 19-vaccinated cattle. In the present work, NH was extracted by the hot-water method (R. Díaz, J. Toyos, M.D. Salvo, and M.L. Pardo, Ann. Rech. Vet. 12:35-39, 1981) and purified free of S-LPS and protein. Purified NH lacked the ability to coat polystyrene and sheep erythrocytes. In contrast, NH acylated with stearoyl chloride bound to both polystyrene and erythrocytes. By hemagglutination and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), S-LPS and acylated NH gave similar results with blood sera from brucellosis-free, strain 19-vaccinated, and infected cattle. Moreover, a significant correlation between the results of NH ELISA and S-LPS ELISA was demonstrated with milk sera. However, in a competitive ELISA with milk sera, S-LPS in the liquid phase abrogated the binding of antibodies to acylated NH adsorbed to polystyrene, while NH in the liquid phase did not influence the binding of antibodies to polystyrene-adsorbed S-LPS. It is hypothesized that the different precipitations of NH and S-LPS with sera from infected or strain 19-vaccinated cattle are due to differences in the affinity of the antibodies produced upon vaccination or infection and in the physical state of aggregation of NH and S-LPS in aqueous solutions.
Notes:
1987
 
PMID 
C Gamazo, I Moriyón (1987)  Release of outer membrane fragments by exponentially growing Brucella melitensis cells.   Infect Immun 55: 3. 609-615 Mar  
Abstract: Rough and smooth strains of Brucella melitensis released a membranous material that was devoid of detectable NADH oxidase and succinic dehydrogenase activity (cytoplasmic membrane markers) but that contained lipopolysaccharide, proteins, and phospholipids. This material was composed of two fractions that had similar chemical compositions but that were of different sizes which were separated by differential ultracentrifugation. Electron microscopy showed that both fractions are made of unit membrane structures. The membrane fragments were released during the exponential phase of growth, and no leakage of malic dehydrogenase activity (cytosol marker) was detected. Thus, the fragments were unlikely a result of cell lysis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blot analysis showed that, although group 2 Brucella outer membrane proteins and lipoprotein were not detected, the proteins in the membranous material were outer membrane proteins. Gas-liquid chromatography analysis showed a similar fatty acid profile for the cell envelope and the outer membrane fragments of the smooth strain B. melitensis 16M. In contrast, the outer membrane fragments from the rough 115 strain were enriched in palmitic and stearic acids. With respect to the unfractionated cell envelope, outer membrane fragments were enriched in phosphatidylcholine, a phospholipid that is unusual in bacterial membranes.
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PMID 
M J Gómez-Miguel, I Moriyón, J López (1987)  Brucella outer membrane lipoprotein shares antigenic determinants with Escherichia coli Braun lipoprotein and is exposed on the cell surface.   Infect Immun 55: 1. 258-262 Jan  
Abstract: In an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), purified Brucella abortus and Escherichia coli peptidoglycan-linked lipoproteins gave a strong cross-reaction with sera from rabbits hyperimmunized with the heterologous lipoprotein. When smooth E. coli cells were used as ELISA antigens, the immunological cross-reaction was not observed unless the cells were treated to remove lipopolysaccharide and other outer membrane components. In contrast, intact cells from smooth strains of B. abortus and Brucella melitensis bound anti-lipoprotein immunoglobulin G, and the controls performed by ELISA showed that this reaction was not due to antibodies to the lipopolysaccharide, group 3 outer membrane proteins, or porins. Electron microscopy of cells labeled with antilipoprotein serum and protein A-colloidal gold showed specific labeling of smooth cells from both B. abortus and B. melitensis, even though unspecific labeling by nonimmune serum was observed with rough B. abortus. These results confirm the close similarity between E. coli and Brucella peptidoglycan-linked lipoproteins and show that, in contrast to E. coli, the lipoprotein of B. abortus and B. melitensis is partially exposed on the surface of smooth cells.
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PMID 
J M Blasco, C M Marín, M Barberán, I Moriyón, R Díaz (1987)  Immunization with Brucella melitensis Rev 1 against Brucella ovis infection of rams.   Vet Microbiol 14: 4. 381-392 Sep  
Abstract: The efficacy of Brucella Melitensis Rev 1 vaccine (Rev 1) for the prophylaxis of Brucella ovis ram epididymitis was evaluated. Twenty-nine 3-month-old rams were vaccinated with 2 X 10(9) Rev 1 and 14 were revaccinated with 5 X 10(8) at 14 months of age. Six rams remained unvaccinated as a control group. All rams were challenged with 5 X 10(8) B. ovis at 21 months of age. Before being slaughtered 8 weeks later, only one vaccinated ram developed epididymitis while four of the six control rams developed testicular alterations. Genital and selected extragenital organs and lymph nodes were removed at slaughter and inoculated on selective media. B. ovis was isolated from 26.6% of the vaccinated rams, 21.4% of the revaccinated rams and 100% of control rams. Portions of epididymis, testes and vesicular glands were also used for pathological studies. More severe lesions were observed in control rams than in vaccinated ones. In conclusion, these results show that vaccination of young lambs, followed or not by revaccination, is a suitable method for the prophylaxis of B. ovis infection of rams.
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PMID 
E Moreno, H Mayer, I Moriyon (1987)  Characterization of a native polysaccharide hapten from Brucella melitensis.   Infect Immun 55: 11. 2850-2853 Nov  
Abstract: The 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of Brucella melitensis native polysaccharide hapten proved to be very similar to that generated by the O-specific chain (PS) isolated from B. melitensis lipopolysaccharide; that is, to a linear polymer in which the repeating unit is composed of five N-formylperosaminyl residues, one of them being substituted at position C-3 and the other four at position C-2. The serological analysis suggests that the so-called A determinant is present solely in Brucella abortus PS, the M determinant is only in B. melitensis PS, and the extensive cross-reaction observed is due to a determinant shared by both polysaccharides.
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1986
 
PMID 
J Toyos, R Díaz, E Urra, I Moriyón (1986)  Analysis by coagglutination of the distribution of a 24,000-dalton surface protein in Yersinia isolates.   J Clin Microbiol 23: 4. 804-805 Apr  
Abstract: The presence of a 24,000-dalton surface protein in 215 isolates of Yersinia enterocolitica and related species was examined. By coagglutination with the specific antiserum, a 100% correlation with the pathogenic biogroups was found. Thus, this method is useful for the rapid screening of potential pathogenic Y. enterocolitica isolates.
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PMID 
M J Gómez-Miguel, I Moriyón (1986)  Demonstration of a peptidoglycan-linked lipoprotein and characterization of its trypsin fragment in the outer membrane of Brucella spp.   Infect Immun 53: 3. 678-684 Sep  
Abstract: The sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) extraction-trypsin digestion protocol used by Braun and Sieglin (V. Braun and U. Sieglin, Eur. J. Biochem. 13:336-346, 1970) to show the peptidoglycan-linked lipoprotein of Escherichia coli was applied to both Brucella abortus and E. coli. Whereas a single polypeptide of 8,000 molecular weight was obtained from E. coli, several proteins of apparent molecular weight lower than 35,000 were demonstrated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in B. abortus. These results did not change when the trypsin digestion conditions were modified. On the other hand, when the SDS extractions were performed under conditions more stringent than those used for other gram-negative bacteria, only a polypeptide fragment of apparent molecular weight of 8,000 was obtained from B. abortus. This polypeptide was similar to the trypsin fragment of the E. coli lipoprotein with respect to its behavior in SDS-polyacrylamide gels, isoelectric point in urea, molecular weight, and presence of both ester- and amide-linked fatty acids. Moreover, the amino acid analysis showed an overall similarity with respect to the amino acid composition of E. coli lipoprotein. A polypeptide of the same molecular weight, isoelectric point, and amino acid composition was also obtained from Brucella ovis by the same method. These results demonstrated that B. abortus and B. ovis cell envelopes contain a lipoprotein and strongly support the hypothesis that it is the only major protein covalently linked to the peptidoglycan.
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PMID 
J I Riezu-Boj, I Moriyón, J M Blasco, C M Marín, R Diaz (1986)  Comparison of lipopolysaccharide and outer membrane protein-lipopolysaccharide extracts in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the diagnosis of Brucella ovis infection.   J Clin Microbiol 23: 5. 938-942 May  
Abstract: Brucella ovis hot saline extracts and petroleum ether-chloroform-phenol lipopolysaccharide were compared in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the diagnosis of B. ovis ram epididymitis. Hot saline extracts detected greater numbers of infected rams. Chemical characterization of the antigens showed that, although both contained lipopolysaccharide, hot saline extracts also contained outer membrane proteins. These proteins were active as antigens in Western blot tests with sera of infected rams, and therefore they explained the better diagnostic results obtained with hot saline extracts. However, compared with lipopolysaccharide, hot saline extracts showed a higher degree of cross-reactivity with sera from smooth B. melitensis-infected animals. This observation might be explained by the presence of B. ovis outer membrane proteins in hot saline extracts which lack the specificity necessary for serological identification of the Brucella species present.
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1985
 
PMID 
R Díaz, E Urra, J Toyos, I Moriyon (1985)  Characterization of a Yersinia enterocolitica antigen common to enterocolitis-associated serotypes.   J Clin Microbiol 22: 6. 1035-1039 Dec  
Abstract: Yersinia enterocolitica synthesized an exocellular antigen common to the serotypes associated with enterocolitis but absent from other serotypes or from other Yersinia species. Both virulent Ca2+-dependent and avirulent Ca2+-independent isogenic pairs derived from the enterocolitis-associated serotypes synthesized the common antigen. Requirements for the synthesis of this common antigen were (i) the presence of metabolizable sugars and (ii) growth on a solid medium at 37 degrees C. The antigen was identified as a 24,000-dalton protein loosely associated with the cell surface but absent from either the cell envelope or the cytoplasmic fraction.
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1984
 
PMID 
R Diaz, J Toyos, M D Salvo, L Fernandez-Lago, B Alonso, I Moriyon, I Dorronsoro (1984)  Studies on the polysaccharide B and native haptene of Brucella and Yersinia enterocolitica serotype 9.   Dev Biol Stand 56: 213-220  
Abstract: Trichloroacetic (TCA) extraction of B. melitensis 115, or hot saline extraction of B. melitensis 16M yields a polysaccharide component that can be purified free of protein and lipopolysaccharide by gel filtration and TCA precipitation. Antibodies to this polysaccharide can be detected in sera of rabbits infected with virulent Brucella but not with B. abortus 19. Similarly, cattle with active brucellosis and humans with acute brucellosis develop antibodies against this polysaccharide. After extraction and purification, this polysaccharide does not elicit antibody response in rabbits or mice. It does not fix the complement, does not bind to red cells or to polystyrene plates.
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PMID 
J M Blasco, R Diaz, I Moriyon, M D Salvo (1984)  Evaluation of a radial immunodiffusion test for diagnosing brucellosis in sheep and its possible value for differentiating infected from Brucella melitensis REV 1 vaccinated sheep.   Dev Biol Stand 56: 507-511  
Abstract: The efficiency of 4 serological test: Rose Bengal (RB), complement fixation (CF), gel diffusion (GD) and radial immunodiffusion (RID) for diagnosing Brucellosis in sheep was compared. RID and CF were also used to evaluate sheep serological response following REV 1 vaccination. Crude smooth lipopolysaccharide (LPS-S) and Polysaccharide B antigens obtained from B. melitensis 16 M were used in GD and RID tests respectively. In experiment 1, two hundred and sixty five sera from adult unvaccinated sheep were studied. The animals used belonged to 4 different flocks, in which was bacteriologically proved the existence of B. melitensis infection. RB positive reaction was obtained in 122 sera being 100, 87 and 91 of these, positive to CF, GD and RID respectively. In experiment 2, one hundred and one ewes from 5 to 10 months of age (and CF negative) were subcutaneously inoculated with 2.10(9) viable Rev 1 organisms. All animals were bled at 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 24, 28 and 52 weeks after being vaccinated, and their serological response to CF and RID tests was studied. The percentage of CF reactors between the 24th and the 52nd weeks decreased from about 30% to less than 8%. The RID reactors in weeks 24 and 52 were 1% and 0% respectively when a concentration of 15 micrograms of Polysaccharide B per ml of gel was used.
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1983
 
PMID 
I Moriyon, D T Berman (1983)  Isolation, purification, and partial characterization of Brucella abortus matrix protein.   Infect Immun 39: 1. 394-402 Jan  
Abstract: Peptidoglycan sacculi with peptidoglycan-associated proteins were prepared from cell envelopes of Brucella abortus by extraction with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) at 50 degrees C. On extraction of these preparations with SDS at 100 degrees C, a protein was obtained whose removal from peptidoglycan was confirmed by electron microscopy. Incubation of the 50 degrees C SDS-extracted cell envelopes with 50 mM MgCl2 in SDS-2-beta-mercaptoethanol at 37 degrees C also extracted the protein, along with lipopolysaccharide. At temperatures below 60 degrees C, the protein did not bind SDS strongly and had an apparent molecular weight greater than 92,000 in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. At higher temperatures, SDS bound strongly, and the apparent molecular weight was 38,000. Urea at 5 M did not alter the electrophoretic mobility of this 38,000-molecular-weight form. Immunoelectrophoresis in detergents with antisera to cell envelopes, carbohydrate staining of SDS-polyacrylamide gels, and production of anti-lipopolysaccharide antibodies by mice immunized with the purified protein indicated that lipopolysaccharide was present in free and protein-bound forms. Sequential gel filtration in SDS-EDTA and SDS-NaCl removed most lipopolysaccharide. After further purification by preparative SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, a gas-liquid chromatographic analysis showed residual lipid tightly associated with the protein. The results suggested that the interactions between matrix proteins and other outer membrane components are stronger in B. abortus than in Escherichia coli, which was used as a control throughout.
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1982
 
PMID 
I Moriyon, D T Berman (1982)  Effects of nonionic, ionic, and dipolar ionic detergents and EDTA on the Brucella cell envelope.   J Bacteriol 152: 2. 822-828 Nov  
Abstract: Cell envelopes prepared from smooth and rough strains of Brucella were characterized on the basis of lipopolysaccharide and protein content. The action of three kinds of detergents on Brucella cell envelopes and Escherichia coli control cell envelopes was examined on the basis of the proteins and lipopolysaccharides that were extracted. As compared with those of E. coli, Brucella cell envelopes were resistant to nonionic detergents. Zwittergents 312 and 316 were most effective in extracting E. coli cell envelopes, and Zwittergent 316 was most effective in extracting Brucella cell envelopes. Sarkosyl extracted proteins but extracted only trace amounts of lipopolysaccharides from cell envelopes of both bacteria. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the Sarkosyl-resistant proteins revealed a composition similar to that of the proteins exposed on the surfaces of viable cells, as determined by the lactoperoxidase-125I radioiodination method. EDTA, with either Tris-HCl or Tris-HCl-Triton X-100, did not have detectable effects on Brucella cell envelopes. Ultracentrifugation of purified lipopolysaccharides in detergents and EDTA demonstrate that, in contrast to that of E. coli, Brucella lipopolysaccharide was not stabilized by divalent cations. Sarkosyl was ineffective in dispersing lipopolysaccharides, whereas the action of Zwittergents was related to the length of their alkyl chains.
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PMID 
L Fernandez-Lago, I Moriyon, J Toyos, R Diaz (1982)  Immunological identity of brucella native hapten, polysaccharide B, and yersinia enterocolitica serotype 9 native hapten.   Infect Immun 38: 2. 778-780 Nov  
Abstract: Yersinia enterocolitica serotype 9 contained an antigenic component giving a reaction of total identity with Brucella native hapten and polysaccharide B. This component was present in a phenol-water extract (fraction 5; M. Redfearn, Ph.D. Thesis, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1960) along with the smooth lipopolysaccharide. The native hapten could be purified free of lipopolysaccharide and proteins by gel filtration.
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1979
 
PMID 
R Diaz, P Garatea, L M Jones, I Moriyon (1979)  Radial immunodiffusion test with a Brucella polysaccharide antigen for differentiating infected from vaccinated cattle.   J Clin Microbiol 10: 1. 37-41 Jul  
Abstract: A Brucella antigen containing polysaccharide but lacking smooth lipopolysaccharide was employed in a rapid radial immunodiffusion test. With this serological test, cattle infected with Brucella abortus could be identified in recently vaccinated herds which had high numbers of reactors to standard diagnostic tests.
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