Reassociation of Purified Lipopolysaccharide and Phospholipid of the Bacterial Cell Envelope: Electron Microscopic and Monolayer Studies

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Phosphatidyl ethanolamine and lipopolysaccharide were extracted and purified from the cell envelope fractions of Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. The two components were studied separately and after recombination, by use of electron microscopy and monolayer techniques, and by measuring their ability to participate in the enzyme-catalyzed uridine diphosphate-galactose:lipopolysaccharide α, 3 galactosyl transferase reaction, which requires a lipopolysaccharide-phospholipid complex as substrate. Electron microscopy of purified lipopolysaccharide showed a uniform population of hollow spheres, with each sphere bounded by a continuous leaflet. The diameter of the spheres was approximately 500 to 1,000 A, and the thickness of the enveloping leaflet was approximately 30 A. Phosphatidyl ethanolamine showed a regular lamellar structure. When lipopolysaccharide and phosphatidyl ethanolamine were mixed under conditions of heating and slow-cooling, the leaflet of the lipopolysaccharide spheroids appeared to extend directly into the phosphatidyl ethanolamine structure, with continuity between the two leaflets. Various stages of penetration were seen. At high concentrations of lipopolysaccharide, there were disruptive changes in phosphatidyl ethanolamine leaflets similar to those seen when saponin acts on cholesterol-lecithin leaflets. Monolayer experiments indicated that lipopolysaccharide penetrated a monomolecular film of phosphatidyl ethanolamine at an air-water interface, as revealed by an increase in surface pressure. The results indicate that a common leaflet structure containing lipopolysaccharide and phosphatidyl ethanolamine may be formed in vitro, and suggest that a similar leaflet may exist in the intact bacterial cell envelope.

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