Coaggregation between Actinomyces viscosus T14V and Streptococcus sanguis 34 depends on interaction of a lectin on A. viscosus T14V with a cell surface carbohydrate on S. sanguis 34. This carbohydrate was isolated, and its chemical makeup was established. The carbohydrate remained attached to S. sanguis 34 cells through extraction with Triton X-100 and treatment with pronase. It was cleaved from the cell residue by autoclaving and purified by differential centrifugation and column chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel and Sephadex G-75. The polysaccharide contained phosphate which was neither inorganic nor monoester. Treatment with NaOH-NaBH4, followed by Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase, or with 48% HF at 4°C, followed by NaBH4, yielded inorganic phosphate and oligosaccharide alditols. Therefore, the polysaccharide is composed of oligosaccharide units joined together by phosphodiester bridges. The structure and stereochemistry of the main oligosaccharide alditol was established previously ( nuclear magnetic resonance studies on the whole polysaccharide revealed the position of the phosphodiester linkages. The polysaccharide is mainly a polymer of (6) GalNAc(al-3)Rha(frl-4)Glc(I1-6)GalftIl-6)GalNAc(P1-3)Gal(a1)-OPO3. It reacted as a single antigen with antiserum to S. sanguis 34 cells and was a potent inhibitor of coaggregation between A. viscosus T14V and S. sanguis 34. Quantitative inhibition of precipitation assays with oligosaccharides, O-allyl N-acetylgalactosaminides, and simple sugars indicated that specific antibodies were directed to the GalNAc end of the hexasaccharide unit. In contrast, coaggregation was inhibited much more effectively by saccharides containing OiGalNAc. Thus, the specificity of the A. viscosus T14V lectin is strikingly different from that of antibodies directed against the S. sanguis 34 polysaccharide.Many of the specific adherence interactions between different bacterial species in dental plaque (15) appear to involve cell-associated lectins on one organism interacting with carbohydrates on another (7-9, 12, 17, 22, 23). One such interaction, lactose-sensitive coaggregation of Actinomyces viscosus T14V with Streptococcus sanguis 34, involves a lectin on A. viscosus T14V and a carbohydrate on S. sanguis 34. Studies have shown that this coaggregation is inhibited much more effectively by Gal,-OMe than by Gala-OMe and more so by Gal(,B1-3)GalNAc than by any other of several disaccharides tested (24-26). While such findings contribute to characterization of the A. viscosus T14V lectin, they provide little insight as to the structure(s) of lectin receptors on S. sanguis 34. We now describe the isolation and characterization of a coaggregation-inhibitory polysaccharide (CIP) from S. sanguis 34 cells that inhibits coaggregation of this organism with A. viscosus T14V and which presumably functions as the receptor on the streptococcal surface.
Serine hydroxymethyltransferase (SHMT) is the primary enzyme in the interconversion of serine and glycine. The roles of mitochondrial and cytosolic SHMT in the interconversion of serine and glycine were determined in two Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell lines that both contain cytosolic SHMT but either have (CHOm+) or lacK (CHOm-) mitochondrial SHMT. Mitochondrial SHMT activity was significantly reduced in CHOm- (0.24 +/- 0.11 nmol/min per mg of mitochondrial protein) compared with CHOm+ (3.21 +/- 0.66 nmol/min per mg of mitochondrial protein; P = 0.02) cells, whereas cytosolic SHMT activity was similar in CHOm- and CHOm+ cells (1.09 +/- 0.31 and 1.53 +/- 0.12 nmol/min per mg of cytosolic protein respectively; P = 0.57). In CHOm+ and CHOm- cells, the relative flux of glycine to serine measured with either [1-13C]- or [2-13C]-glycine was similar (CHOm-: 538 +/- 82 nmol/24 per mg of DNA; CHOm+: 616 +/- 88 nmol/24 h per mg of DNA; P = 0.42). In contrast, the relative flux of serine to glycine measured with [1-13C]serine was low in CHOm- cells (80 +/- 28 nmol/24 h per mg of DNA) compared with CHOm+ cells (3080 +/- 320 nmol/24 h per mg of DNA; P = 0.0001). The rate of glycine production determined by [1-(13)C]glycine dilution was lower in CHOm- (1200 +/- 200 nmol/24 h per mg of DNA) than CHOm+ (10200 +/- 1800 nmol/24 h per mg of DNA; P = 0.03) cells, whereas glycine utilization was similar in the two cell lines. Serine production was similar in the two cell lines but serine utilization was lower in CHOm- (3800 +/- 1200 mu mol/24 h per mg of DNA) than CHOm+ (6600 +/- 1000 nmol/24 h per mg of DNA; P = 0.0002) cells. Increasing the serine concentration in the medium resulted in an increase in glycine production in CHOm+ but not in CHOm- cells. Intracellular studies with [1-13C]serine confirm the findings of decreased glycine production from serine. In CHO cells there is partitioning of intracellular serine and glycine metabolism. Our data support the hypothesis that mitochondrial SHMT is the primary pathway for serine into glycine interconversion.
The concentrations of glucose, fructose, sorbitol, glycerol, and myo-inositol in sheep blood and tissues have been reported previously (1–5). However, the other polyols that are at low concentrations have not been investigated in pregnant sheep due to technical difficulties. By using HPLC and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, seven polyols (myo-inositol, glycerol, erythritol, arabitol, sorbitol, ribitol, and mannitol) and three hexoses (mannose, glucose, and fructose) were identified and quantified in four blood vessels supplying and draining the placenta (maternal artery, uterine vein, fetal artery, and umbilical vein). Uterine and umbilical blood flows were measured, and uptakes of all the polyols and hexoses in both maternal and fetal circulations were calculated. There was a significant net placental release of sorbitol to both maternal and fetal circulations. Fructose was also taken up significantly by the uterine circulation. Maternal plasma mannose concentrations were higher than fetal concentrations, and there was a net umbilical uptake of mannose, characteristics that are similar to those of glucose. Myo-inositol and erythritol had relatively high concentrations in fetal plasma (697.8 ± 53 μM and 463.8 ± 27 μM, respectively). The ratios of fetal/maternal plasma arterial concentrations were very high for most polyols. The concentrations of myo-inositol, glycerol, and sorbitol were also high in sheep placental tissue (2489 ± 125 μM/kg wet tissue, 2119 ± 193 μM/kg wet tissue, and 3910 ± 369 μM/kg wet tissue), an indication that these polyols could be made within the placenta.
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