Structure and properties of the outer membranes of Brucella abortus and Brucella melitensis
Keywords: 
Brucella abortus
Brucella melitensis
Outer membrane
Lipopolysaccharide
Bacterial pathogenicity
Issue Date: 
1998
Publisher: 
Springer
ISSN: 
1139-6709
Citation: 
Moriyon I, Lopez-Goni I. Structure and properties of the outer membranes of Brucella abortus and Brucella melitensis. Int Microbiol 1998 Mar;1(1):19-26.
Abstract
The brucellae are Gram-negative bacteria characteristically able to multiply facultatively within phagocytic cells and which cause a zoonosis of world-wide importance. This article reviews the structure and topology of the main components (lipopolysaccharide, native hapten polysaccharide, free lipids and proteins) of the outer membranes of Brucella abortus and B. melitensis, as well as some distinctive properties (permeability and interactions with cationic peptides) of these membranes. On these data, an outer membrane model is proposed in which, as compared to other Gram-negatives, there is a stronger hydrophobic anchorage for the lipopolysaccharide, free lipids, porin proteins and lipoproteins, and a reduced surface density of anionic groups, which could be partially or totally neutralized by ornithine lipids. This model accounts for the permeability of Brucella to hydrophobic permeants and for its resistance to the bactericidal oxygen-independent systems of phagocytes.

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