[Bacterial endotoxins: relationship between chemical structure and biological effect]
- PMID: 8340135
[Bacterial endotoxins: relationship between chemical structure and biological effect]
Abstract
Gram-negative bacteria carry on their surface endotoxins, which are essential for bacterial growth and survival. If released from the bacterial cell, endotoxins induce in higher organisms a great variety of pathophysiological effects. Chemically, endotoxins constitute lipopolysaccharides (LPS), the lipid component (termed lipid A) of which is responsible for the induction of endotoxin effects. The structural and conformational parameters, endowing lipid A with its potent bioactivity, have been well characterized. The toxic effects of endotoxins are initiated by the specific interaction of lipid A with macrophages/monocytes resulting in the production of peptide or lipid mediators. This interaction is governed by a unique (toxic) conformation of lipid A on the one hand, and by specific cellular receptors on the other. The interaction and subsequent mediator production can be specifically and antagonistically inhibited by lipid A partial structures. A recently developed monoclonal anti-LPS-antibody cross-reacts with endotoxins of various bacterial origin, and it cross-protects against harmful endotoxin effects such as pyrogenicity and lethality.