1995
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.1995.mmi_17061167.x
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A cell‐surface polysaccharide that facilitates rapid population migration by differentiated swarm cells of Proteus mirabilis

Abstract: Swarming by Proteus mirabilis is characterized by cycles of rapid population migration across surfaces, following differentiation of typical vegetative rods into long, hyperflagellated, virulent swarm cells. A swarm-defective TnphoA insertion mutant was isolated that was not defective in cell motility, differentiation or control of the migration cycle, but was specifically impaired in the ability to undergo surface translocation as a multicellular mass. The mutation, previously shown to compromise urinary trac… Show more

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Cited by 130 publications
(129 citation statements)
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“…In contrast, a number of insertions uncoupled these phenotypes, resulting in mutants that swim but cannot swarm, or that swarm aberrantly. These were also affected in chemotaxis, extracellular polysaccharide synthesis or cell elongation, which are themselves complex traits (Belas et al, 1995;Gygi et al, 1995). From the standpoint of this discussion, a particularly striking observation is that conversion of vegetative cells into swarm cells is accompanied by a marked increase in expression of several putative virulence factors (Allison et al, 1992).…”
Section: Swarming Up the Urinary Tract?mentioning
confidence: 86%
“…In contrast, a number of insertions uncoupled these phenotypes, resulting in mutants that swim but cannot swarm, or that swarm aberrantly. These were also affected in chemotaxis, extracellular polysaccharide synthesis or cell elongation, which are themselves complex traits (Belas et al, 1995;Gygi et al, 1995). From the standpoint of this discussion, a particularly striking observation is that conversion of vegetative cells into swarm cells is accompanied by a marked increase in expression of several putative virulence factors (Allison et al, 1992).…”
Section: Swarming Up the Urinary Tract?mentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Under general conditions, S. liquefaciens directly extract the wetting-agent from the underlying media. Rauprich et al (1996) indicate that a similar phenomenon in colonies of Proteus mirabilis is facilitated by an extracellular acidic capsular polysaccaride (see Gygi et al 1995). This chemical component works together with the physical behaviour of the swarmer cells in order to extract a wetting agent from the underlying medium.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This may enhance the formation of struvite and carbonate apatite stones in urinary tract under alkaline conditions in the presence of ammonia, one of the products of urea decomposition caused by Proteus bacteria [11]. Recently, the importance of an acidic polysaccharide rich in galacturonic acid and galactosamine was demonstrated for migration of P. mirabilis swarm cells by reduction of surface friction [12].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This may enhance the formation of struvite and carbonate apatite stones in urinary tract under alkaline conditions in the presence of ammonia, one of the products of urea decomposition caused by Proteus bacteria [11]. Recently, the importance of an acidic polysaccharide rich in galacturonic acid and galactosamine was demonstrated for migration of P. mirabilis swarm cells by reduction of surface friction [12].A few structures of P. vulgaris O-antigens have been elucidated, some of them having been found neutral [7,13] and the others acidic [7Ϫ9]. Now, we report the structure of a new acidic O-specific polysaccharide of P. vulgaris O32 containing D-galacturonic acid.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%