Significant differences in cysteine-containing proteins and detergent-related solubility properties were observed between outer membrane protein complexes of reproductive (reticulate body) and infective (elementary body) forms of Chlamydia psittaci (6BC). Elementary bodies harvested at 48 h postinfection possessed a 40-kilodalton major outer membrane protein and three extraordinarily cysteine-rich outer membrane proteins of 62, 59, and 12 kilodaltons, all of which were not solubilized by sodium dodecyl sulfate in the absence of thiol reagents. Intracellularly dividing reticulate bodies harvested at 21 h postinfection were severely deficient in the cysteine-rich proteins but possessed almost as much major outer membrane protein as did the elementary bodies. Most of the major outer membrane protein of reticulate bodies was solubilized by sodium dodecyl sulfate and was present in envelopes as monomers, although a proportion formed disulfide-cross-linked oligomers. By 21 to 24 h postinfection, reticulate bodies commenced synthesis of the cysteine-rich proteins which were found in outer membranes as disulfide-cross-linked complexes. The outer membranes of reticulate bodies of Chlamydia trachomatis (LGV434) also were found to be deficient in cysteine-rich proteins and to be more susceptible to dissociation in sodium dodecyl sulfate than were outer membranes of elementary bodies.
~ ~The effects of omission of individual amino acids from growth medium on the multiplication of a range of Chlamydia trachomatis and C . psittaci strains in cycloheximide-treated McCoy cells have been assessed. Differences in requirements were revealed which for C. trachomatis strains correlated with clinical syndrome and for C. psittaci with host origin. All 1 1 strains of C. trachomatis examined showed a requirement for addition of histidine to the medium; this was not shown by any of four C. psittaci strains. Among the strains of C. trachomatis, three from cases of trachoma, representing serotypes A, B and C, showed a distinctive requirement for the addition of tryptophan to the medium, whilst six strains of oculogenital origin, representing serotypes D-I, exhibited no requirement for tryptophan or methionine; a lymphogranuloma venereum and a 'fast variant' strain both showed a requirement for methionine. Of the four C. psittaci strains from different hosts, three showed distinct patterns of amino acid requirements. All chlamydiae required the addition of valine to medium and the majority required leucine, phenylalanine and also glutamine.
The effects of omission of individual amino acids from growth medium on the differentiation of Chlamydia trachomatis DK-20 (serotype E) during infection of cycloheximide-treated McCoy cells are described. As judged by inclusion body staining with acridine orange, omission of cysteine from the medium severely retarded differentiation of reproductive reticulate body (RB) to infective elementary body (EB) forms. The effect appeared specific to cysteine in that omission of other amino acids had little or no effect on differentiation once RBs appeared. On restoration of cysteine, culture infectivity increased and inclusions contained organisms which, by cytochemical and morphological criteria, were differentiating to infective forms, indicating that cysteine deprivation did not irreversibly inhibit differentiation. Impairment of RB to EB differentiation in cysteine-less medium was also observed for three strains of Chlamydia psittaci and 10 other strains of C. trachomatis. It is suggested that the effect arises via the biosynthetic requirement for cysteine for provision of three cysteine-rich proteins, whose synthesis and insertion into the outer membrane have previously been shown to accompany RB to EB differentiation of C. psittaci 6BC and C. trachomatis 434 (serotype L2). Synthesis of cysteine-rich outer membrane proteins during differentiation may thus be common to all chlamydiae.
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