Methods published for the purification of P.II proteins from Neisseria gonorrhoea have been modified to allow the purification of class 5 proteins from Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A bacteria. The five class 5 protein electrophoretic variants detected within an epidemic in the Gambia (a, b, c, d, and e) and three other variants (f, g, and h) found within other isolates of the same clone in West Africa have been purified with yields of 6-28 mg. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence for variant c differs from those of the other class 5 proteins, whereas the latter are very similar to the sequence predicted for two class 5 proteins from DNA analyses of serogroup C meningococci and determined for 8 P.II proteins from gonococci. Numerous other regulatory, chemical, and serological differences were found between the c protein and the other class 5 proteins such that we recommend that the class 5 proteins be subdivided into two subclasses. mAbs have been isolated that distinguish between these two protein subclasses and Western blotting with these antibodies enabled us to conclude that both protein subclasses were found in bacteria isolated from different epidemics and pandemics of the last 50 yr.
The expression of six antigenic epitopes on plasma Tg and tissue-derived Tg was investigated using mouse mabs in immunoradiometric assays. The sensitivity of the assays ranged between 0.5 and 1.5 micrograms l-1. Plasma thyroglobulin of 15 normal individuals and 18 patients with metastatic, differentiated thyroid cancer was analysed. Whereas five monoclonals produced values comparable to the conventional RIA system, the monoclonal antibody Tg 158 did not detect any Tg in the normal individuals and only low levels in two of the cancer patients with the highest Tg levels. In contrast, dilutions of extracts of three different euthyroid goitre samples and three different samples of differentiated thyroid cancer revealed no difference in the antigenic expression of all six epitopes, including the Tg 158 epitope. Papain digestion of purified Tg resulted in a 76 kD fragment which showed immunoreactivity for Tg 158 as well as for Tg 11. No interference of the binding of Tg 158 by T3, T4 or DIT could be detected. We conclude that the monoclonal antibody Tg 158 detects an epitope which is present in thyroid tissue-derived Tg but not in circulating thyroglobulin. This antibody might be useful for the investigation of the secretory process of thyroglobulin from the thyrocytes into the circulation.
The isolation of a series of plasmid mutant derivatives that overproduce the traT outer membrane protein, TraTp, is described. Some of the mutants directed the synthesis of 10-fold more TraTp (200,000 copies/cell) than did the parental plasmid (20,000 copies/cell). The proteins specified by all mutant plasmids except one were correctly inserted into the outer membrane and exposed on the cell surface. The TraTp that was not correctly inserted did not mediate the expected levels of surface exclusion and serum resistance, suggesting that surface localization is a requirement of TraTp function. The overproduction of TraTp was deleterious to bacterial growth, particularly that of minicell mutants of E. coli K-12.
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