Electrophoretic and immunochemical analyses of the lipopolysaccharides from various strains of Aeromonas hydrophila.

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RESUMO

Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used to analyze the lipopolysaccharides isolated from strains of Aeromonas hydrophila which exhibit virulence for fish and which autoaggregate during growth in static broth culture. The lipopolysaccharides contained O-polysaccharide chains of homogeneous chain length. Two of the strains produced a surface protein array, and immunofluorescence and phage-binding studies revealed that a number of these O-polysaccharide chains of homogeneous length traversed the protein array and were exposed on the cell surface. Immunochemical analyses by immunoblotting, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, immunofluorescence, and immunoprecipitation with both polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies revealed the presence of three epitopes on the polysaccharide moiety of this homogenous-chain-length lipopolysaccharide morphotype. One epitope was species serogroup specific and reactive by immunoblotting. This epitope was not present on the heterogeneous-chain-length O polysaccharides of nonautoaggregating strains of A. hydrophila examined. The second epitope was conformation dependent and cross-reactive with an epitope on the homogenous-chain-length O polysaccharides of Aeromonas salmonicida lipopolysaccharide. The third epitope was recognized by a monoclonal antibody and appeared to involve that region of the A. hydrophila and A. salmonicida lipopolysaccharide molecules which contained the O-polysaccharide-core oligosaccharide glycosidic linkage.

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