The injection of bacteria (Staphylococcus aureus, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia) or true fungi (Candida albicans, Candida tropicalis) that are pathogenic to humans into the silkworm hemolymph leads to death of the larvae within 2 days. Antibiotics used for clinical purposes have therapeutic effects on silkworms infected with these pathogens. The 50% effective doses obtained by injection into the silkworm hemolymph are consistent with those reported for mice. Injection of vancomycin and kanamycin into the silkworm hemolymph was effective, but oral administration was not. Chloramphenicol, which is effective by oral administration, appeared in the silkworm hemolymph soon after injection into the midgut, whereas vancomycin did not. Isolated midgut membranes were impermeable to vancomycin. Thus, the ineffectiveness of oral administration of vancomycin to silkworms is due to a lack of intestinal absorption.
We isolated and characterized temperature-sensitive mutants for two genes, dnaE and polC, that are essential for DNA replication in Staphylococcus aureus. DNA replication in these mutants had a slow-stop phenotype when the temperature was shifted to a non-permissive level. The dnaE gene encodes a homolog of the alpha-subunit of the DNA polymerase III holoenzyme, the replicase essential for chromosomal DNA replication in Escherichia coli. The polC gene encodes PolC, another catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase, which is specifically found in gram-positive bacteria. The wild-type dnaE or polC gene complemented the temperature-sensitive phenotypes of cell growth and DNA replication in the corresponding mutant. Single mutations resulting in amino-acid exchanges were identified in the dnaE and polC genes of the temperature-sensitive mutants. The results indicate that these genes encode two distinct DNA polymerases which are both essential for chromosomal DNA replication in S. aureus. The number of viable mutant cells decreased at non-permissive temperature, suggesting that inactivation of DnaE and PolC has a bactericidal effect and that these enzymes are potential targets of antibiotics.
Background : Glycophorin A (GPA) has a large number of sialic acid-containing oligosaccharide chains. GPA is highly conserved among vertebrates, mice with a GPA deletion have not been reported and GPA's physiologic role remains uncertain.
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