Unique lipid composition of Treponema pallidum (Nichols virulent strain)

HM Matthews, TK Yang, HM Jenkin - Infection and immunity, 1979 - Am Soc Microbiol
HM Matthews, TK Yang, HM Jenkin
Infection and immunity, 1979Am Soc Microbiol
The lipid composition of Treponema pallidum (Nichols virulent strain) was determined after
purification of the organisms from the infected testes of corticosteroid-treated rabbits by
differential centrifugation, filtration through Nuclepore membranes, and sedimentation in
Hypaque density gradients. The total lipids were comprised of 32.2% neutral lipids, mainly
cholesterol, and 67.8% phospholipids consisting of phosphatidylcholine (32.1%),
sphingomyelin (14.8%), cardiolipin (13.0%), phosphatidylethanolamine (6.2%) …
The lipid composition of Treponema pallidum (Nichols virulent strain) was determined after purification of the organisms from the infected testes of corticosteroid-treated rabbits by differential centrifugation, filtration through Nuclepore membranes, and sedimentation in Hypaque density gradients. The total lipids were comprised of 32.2% neutral lipids, mainly cholesterol, and 67.8% phospholipids consisting of phosphatidylcholine (32.1%), sphingomyelin (14.8%), cardiolipin (13.0%), phosphatidylethanolamine (6.2%), phosphatidylinositol-serine (1.2%), and lysophosphatidylcholine (0.4%). Monoglycosyldiglyceride, a glycolipid comprising 25 to 50% of thetotal lipid of all Treponema previously examined, was not detected. The fatty acid composition was similar but quntitatively distinct from that of the infected testes tissue.
American Society for Microbiology