“…Purified SMF-1 agglutinated erythrocytes of several animal species and this activity was inhibited by anti-SMF-1 antibodies. The major fimbrial subunit produced by S. maltophilia , a polypeptide of 17 kDa, was found to be highly related to the family of fimbrial adhesins comprised by the G, F17, K99 and 20K fimbriae produced by several Escherichia coli pathogroups, and CupA of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Guinée et al ., 1976;Rhen et al ., 1986;Lintermans et al ., 1988;Bertin et al ., 1996;Klemm and Schembri, 2000;Vallet et al ., 2001). This relatedness, the ability to agglutinate erythrocytes, and the presence of abundant fimbriae on adhering organisms suggest that the SMF-1 fimbriae may be important for the adhesiveness on abiotic and biotic surfaces, and probably to the pathobiology caused by this emerging pathogen.…”