The use of a phospholipase A-less Escherichia coli mutant to establish the action of granulocyte phospholipase A on bacterial phospholipids during killing by a highly purified granulocyte fraction
- PMID: 322712
- DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(77)90205-x
The use of a phospholipase A-less Escherichia coli mutant to establish the action of granulocyte phospholipase A on bacterial phospholipids during killing by a highly purified granulocyte fraction
Abstract
Phospholipase A2 present in a highly purified, potently bactericidal, fraction from rabbit graulocytes produces net bacterial phospholipid degradation during killing of a phospholipase A-less strain of Escherichia coli. In the wild-type parent strain phospholipid breakdown is caused not only by the action of phospholipase A2 but also by phospholipase A1, indicating activation of the most prominent phospholipase of E. coli. This activation occurs as soon as the bacteria are exposed to the granulocyte fraction. Phospholipid breakdown by both phospholipases A is dose dependent but reaches a plateau after 30-60 min and at higher concentrations of the fraction. Phospholipid degradation is accompanied in both strains by an increase in permeability to actinomycin D that is also dose dependent. Even though net hydrolysis of phospholipids is greater in the parent strain than in the mutant, the increase in permeability is the same in the two strains. The addition of 0.04 M Mg2+, after the effects on phospholipids and permeability have become manifest, initiates in both strains the restoration of insensitivity to actinomycin D, the net resynthesis of phospholipids, and the disappearance of monoacylphosphatides and the partial disappearance of free fatty acids that had accumulated. Loss of ability to multiply is not reversed by Mg2+ in either strain. Less than 5 micrograms of granulocyte fraction causes loss of viability of from 90 to 99% of 1 X 10(8) microorganisms of both strains. However, at lower concentrations the parent strain is considerably more sensitive to the bactericidal effect of the granulocyte fraction than the mutant strain.
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