Response of gonococcal clinical isolates to acidic conditions.

J Med Microbiol

Department of Biology, Western Oregon University, Monmouth, Oregon 97361, USA.

Published: February 1999

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how four gonococcal strains respond to acidic conditions, finding that their growth is affected by both the strain type and the growth phase.
  • All strains were unable to grow on solid media below pH 5.8, with NRL38884 failing to survive below pH 5.2, while others could survive to pH 4.5, indicating a potential distinct acid tolerance mechanism.
  • Analysis of protein expression showed changes in outer-membrane proteins under varying pH, suggesting the immune system may interact differently with gonococci based on the local acidity of colonized sites.

Article Abstract

This study examined the response to acidic conditions of four gonococcal isolates -NRL38874 (Proto/IB-2), NRL38884 (Pro/IA-2), NRL38953 (Proto/IB-3) and NRL39029 (Pro/IA-3) - obtained from various sites in patients in whom a diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease had been made by laparoscopic examination. Acid tolerance of the clinical isolates was strain and growth phase dependent. Growth of the four strains on solid media was undetectable below pH 5.8. In liquid culture, strain NRL38884 did not survive below pH 5.2; strains NRL38874, NRL38953 and NRL39029 survived to pH 4.5. Between pH 4.2 and pH 5.1, the latter three strains exhibited a peak in survival at pH 4.6-4.7 during log phase, suggesting that there may be a distinct acid tolerance system operating at this pH. SDS-PAGE of whole-cell, total membrane and outer-membrane fractions of the four strains prepared from pH 7.2 and pH 6.1 plate cultures revealed numerous differences in protein composition. Acidic conditions reduced the expression of the reduction modifiable outer-membrane protein Rmp, and induced the expression of many membrane proteins, including gonococcal hsp63. Immunoblotting studies with matched serum samples and strains from patients with pelvic inflammatory disease indicated that IgG recognition of outer-membrane components from strains cultured in acidic and neutral conditions was quite different. The results suggest that the immune system interacts with unique outer-membrane constituents on gonococci colonising sites at different pH.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/00222615-48-2-149DOI Listing

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