scholarly journals REVERSIBLE INACTIVATION OF TYPHUS RICKETTSIAE

1954 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marianna R. Bovarnick ◽  
Emma G. Allen

Rickettsiae that have been frozen and thawed in isotonic salt solutions show greatly decreased toxicity for mice, hemolytic activity, respiration, and infectivity for eggs. All these properties can be partially restored by incubation of the rickettsiae in the presence of DPN and coenzyme A for 2 hours at 34°C. The extent of both inactivation and of subsequent reactivation is markedly affected by the presence of low concentrations of sucrose during the process of freezing and thawing. It has been shown that DPN is present in rickettsial suspensions and that in preparations that have not been frozen, the DPN sediments with the rickettsiae. After freezing in isotonic salt solution the DPN becomes non-sedimentable.

2009 ◽  
Vol 191 (6) ◽  
pp. 1749-1755 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey G. Gardner ◽  
Jorge C. Escalante-Semerena

ABSTRACT This report provides in vivo evidence for the posttranslational control of the acetyl coenzyme A (Ac-CoA) synthetase (AcsA) enzyme of Bacillus subtilis by the acuA and acuC gene products. In addition, both in vivo and in vitro data presented support the conclusion that the yhdZ gene of B. subtilis encodes a NAD+-dependent protein deacetylase homologous to the yeast Sir2 protein (also known as sirtuin). On the basis of this new information, a change in gene nomenclature, from yhdZ to srtN (for sirtuin), is proposed to reflect the activity associated with the YdhZ protein. In vivo control of B. subtilis AcsA function required the combined activities of AcuC and SrtN. Inactivation of acuC or srtN resulted in slower growth and cell yield under low-acetate conditions than those of the wild-type strain, and the acuC srtN strain grew under low-acetate conditions as poorly as the acsA strain. Our interpretation of the latter result was that both deacetylases (AcuC and SrtN) are needed to maintain AcsA as active (i.e., deacetylated) so the cell can grow with low concentrations of acetate. Growth of an acuA acuC srtN strain on acetate was improved over that of the acuA + acuC srtN strain, indicating that the AcuA acetyltransferase enzyme modifies (i.e., inactivates) AcsA in vivo, a result consistent with previously reported in vitro evidence that AcsA is a substrate of AcuA.


1955 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 225-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. Northrop ◽  

Preparation of Reversibly Inactivated (R.I.) Phage.— If B. megatherium phage (of any type, or in any stage of purification) is suspended in dilute salt solutions at pH 5–6, it is completely inactivated; i.e., it does not form plaques, or give rise to more phage when mixed with a sensitive organism (Northrop, 1954). The inactivation occurs when the phage is added to the dilute salt solution. If a suspension of the inactive phage in pH 7 peptone is titrated to pH 5 and allowed to stand, the activity gradually returns. The inactivation is therefore reversible. Properties of R.I. Phage.— The R.I. phage is adsorbed by sensitive cells at about the same rate as the active phage. It kills the cells, but no active phage is produced. The R.I. phage therefore has the properties of phage "ghosts" (Herriott, 1951) or of colicines (Gratia, 1925), or phage inactivated by ultraviolet light (Luria, 1947). The R.I. phage is sedimented in the centrifuge at the same rate as active phage. It is therefore about the same size as the active phage. The R.I. phage is most stable in pH 7, 5 per cent peptone, and may be kept in this solution for weeks at 0°C. The rate of digestion of R.I. phage by trypsin, chymotrypsin, or desoxyribonuclease is about the same as that of active phage (Northrop, 1955 a). Effect of Various Substances on the Formation of R.I. Phage.— There is an equilibrium between R.I. phage and active phage. The R.I. form is the stable one in dilute salt solution, pH 5 to 6.5 and at low temperature (<20°C.). At pH >6.5, in dilute salt solution, the R.I. phage changes to the active form. The cycle, active ⇌ inactive phage, may be repeated many times at 0°C. by changing the pH of the solution back and forth between pH 7 and pH 6. Irreversible inactivation is caused by distilled water, some heavy metals, concentrated urea or quanidine solutions, and by l-arginine. Reversible inactivation is prevented by all salts tested (except those causing irreversible inactivation, above). The concentration required to prevent R.I. is lower, the higher the valency of either the anion or cation. There are great differences, however, between salts of the same valency, so that the chemical nature as well as the valency is important. Peptone, urea, and the amino acids, tryptophan, leucine, isoleucine, methionine, asparagine, dl-cystine, valine, and phenylalanine, stabilize the system at pH 7, so that no change occurs if a mixture of R.I. and active phage is added to such solutions. The active phage remains active and the R.I. phage remains inactive. The R.I. phage in pH 7 peptone becomes active if the pH is changed to 5.0. This does not occur in solutions of urea or the amino acids which stabilize at pH 7.0. Kinetics of Reversible Inactivation.— The inactivation is too rapid, even at 0° to allow the determination of an accurate time-inactivation curve. The rate is independent of the phage concentration and is complete in a few seconds, even in very dilute suspensions containing <1 x 104 particles/ml. This result rules out any type of bimolecular reaction, or any precipitation or agglutination mechanism, since the minimum theoretical time for precipitation (or agglutination) of a suspension of particles in a concentration of only 1 x 104 per ml. would be about 300 days even though every collision were effective. Mechanism of Salt Reactivation.— Addition of varying concentrations of MgSO4 (or many other salts) to a suspension of either active or R.I. phage in 0.01 M, pH 6 acetate buffer results in the establishment of an equilibrium ratio for active/R.I. phage. The higher the concentration of salt, the larger proportion of the phage is active. The results, with MgSO4, are in quantitative agreement with the following reaction: See PDF for Equation Effect of Temperature.— The rate of inactivation is too rapid to be measured with any accuracy, even at 0°C. The rate of reactivation in pH 5 peptone, at 0 and 10°, was measured and found to have a temperature coefficient Q10 = 1.5 corresponding to a value of E (Arrhenius' constant) of 6500 cal. mole–1. This agrees very well with the temperature coefficient for the reactivation of denatured soy bean trypsin inhibitor (Kunitz, 1948). The equilibrium between R.I. and active phage is shifted toward the active side by lowering the temperature. The ratio R.I.P./AP is 4.7 at 15° and 2.8 at 2°. This corresponds to a change in free energy of –600 cal. mole–1 and a heat of reaction of 11,000. These values are much lower than the comparative one for trypsin (Anson and Mirsky, 1934 a) or soy bean trypsin inhibitor (Kunitz, 1948). Neither the inactivation nor the reactivation reactions are affected by light. The results in general indicate that there is an equilibrium between active and R.I. phage. The R.I. phage is probably an intermediate step in the formation of inactive phage. The equilibrium is shifted to the active side by lowering the temperature, adjusting the pH to 7–8 (except in the presence of high concentrations of peptone), raising the salt concentration, or increasing the valency of the ions present. The reaction may be represented by the following: See PDF for Equation The assumption that the active/R.I. phage equilibrium represents an example of native/denatured protein equilibrium predicts all the results qualitatively. Quantitatively, however, it fails to predict the relative rate of digestion of the two forms by trypsin or chymotrypsin, and also the effect of temperature on the equilibrium.


Soft Matter ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (29) ◽  
pp. 6058-6069 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yael Avni ◽  
Tomer Markovich ◽  
Rudolf Podgornik ◽  
David Andelman

We revisit the charge-regulation mechanism of macro-ions and apply it to mobile macro-ions in a bathing salt solution.


BIOPHYSICS ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 588-592 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. I. Murtazina ◽  
I. S. Ryzhkina ◽  
O. A. Mishina ◽  
V. V. Andrianov ◽  
T. Kh. Bogodvid ◽  
...  

1985 ◽  
Vol 50 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. R. Flambard ◽  
H.-U. Fusban ◽  
Ch. Keiling ◽  
G. Marx

AbstractExperiments have been carried out into the leaching of ILW conditioned in cement and bitumen in concentrated salt solutions. Although difficult to observe with real waste leachates, investigations into the leaching of a simulated waste in cement have indicated leached transuranic levels of ca. 10−9 M ; the amount of activity leached by a quinary salt solution being 102 - 103 times higher . This has been interpreted in terms of a pH effect. For the real waste, spectroscopy has indicated a significantly larger release of Cs from cement than from bitumen. For all waste samples a notable absence of colloidal material was observed ; an observation which can be explained in terms of the high solution ionic strengths and the corresponding influence upon radionuclide solvation.Transuranic mobility studies through salt and sand from a salt dome in Northern Germany have shown the presence of at least two types of species of wildly differing mobility ; one migrating with approximately the same velocity as that of the solvent front and the other strongly retarded. Actinide recoveries (i.e. that passing through the columns) could be strongly influenced by either changing the system pH or by the addition of a competitor such as Ce ; the latter effect pointing to a competitive sorption.


2003 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 390-395 ◽  
Author(s):  
HAYDEN K. CRESSY ◽  
ALISTAIR R. JERRETT ◽  
CAROLYN M. OSBORNE ◽  
PHIL J. BREMER

The use of multiple freeze (−20°C)–thaw cycles in combination with isoeugenol and polysorbate 80 was investigated as a method for the reduction of numbers of Listeria monocytogenes cells in a bacteriological medium. Three freeze (1 h, −20°C)–thaw cycles in the presence of isoeugenol at concentrations of 0, 100, and 300 ppm resulted in average L. monocytogenes reductions of 0.69, 2.65, and 3.3 log10 MPN (most probable number) per ml, respectively. Increasing the number of freeze–thaw cycles further decreased cell numbers, with reductions of nearly 5 log10 MPN/ml being obtained with six freeze-thaw cycles. Freeze–thaw cycles were effective in reducing cell numbers at isoeugenol concentrations down to 25 ppm. Rapid freezing rates with liquid nitrogen were found to be less effective in reducing numbers of L. monocytogenes cells. Two rapid freeze–thaw cycles in the presence of 100 ppm isoeugenol and polysorbate 80 resulted in a reduction of 1.45 log10 MPN/ml. Two freezing (−20°C) cycles involving slow freezing and thawing rates with samples being held frozen for 6 h for each cycle resulted in reductions larger than those obtained with faster freezing rates. It was found that complete thawing in freeze-thaw cycles was not necessary to achieve bactericidal action. The application of multiple freeze-thaw cycles in combination with low concentrations of isoeugenol could effectively reduce numbers of L. monocytogenes cells in bacteriological media.


1926 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. Northrop ◽  
M. Kunitz

1. The swelling and the osmotic pressure of gelatin at pH 4.7 have been measured in the presence of a number of salts. 2. The effect of the salts on the swelling is closely paralleled by the effect on the osmotic pressure, and the bulk modulus of the gelatin particles calculated from these figures is constant up to an increase in volume of about 800 per cent. As soon as any of the salts increase the swelling beyond this point, the bulk. modulus decreases. This is interpreted as showing that the elastic limit has been exceeded. 3. Gelatin swollen in acid returns to its original volume after removal of the acid, while gelatin swollen in salt solution does not do so. This is the expected result if, as stated above, the elastic limit had been exceeded in the salt solution. 4. The modulus of elasticity of gelatin swollen in salt solutions varies in the same way as the bulk modulus calculated from the osmotic pressure and the swelling. 5. The increase in osmotic pressure caused by the salt is reversible on removal of the salt. 6. The observed osmotic pressure is much greater than the osmotic pressure calculated from the Donnan equilibrium except in the case of AlCl3, where the calculated and observed pressures agree quite closely. 7. The increase in swelling in salt solutions is due to an increase in osmotic pressure. This increase is probably due to a change in the osmotic pressure of the gelatin itself rather than to a difference in ion concentration.


1917 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
John A. Kolmer

1. The resistance of erythrocytes of dogs to the hemolytic activity of cobra venom is increased after splenectomy. 2. This increased resistance was observed as early as 4 days after splenectomy and usually persisted for a period of about 3 weeks, when the resistance gradually decreased to normal or slightly beyond. 3. The decrease of resistance to the hemolytic activity of venom for the erythrocytes of splenectomized dogs following the primary increase is apparently coincident with the anemia following splenectomy. An intercurrent infection, such as distemper, tends to reduce the resistance of erythrocytes to venom. 4. An increased resistance of the erythrocytes to hypotonic salt solutions was found with all the splenectomized dogs in which these tests were made. Increased resistance to hypotonic salt solutions apparently persists for a longer period than the increased resistance to cobra venom. 5. As the lysis of erythrocytes by venom is dependent upon the presence of certain lipoidal substances within the cells, and as the spleen may exercise an influence over the lipoidal contents of corpuscles and serum, it is suggested that the increased resistance of erythrocytes to the hemolytic activity of venom after splenectomy is due to alterations in the lipoid content of the erythrocytes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document