Binding of 125I-labeled alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) to streptococci belonging to serological groups A, B, C, and G was studied. Streptococci of groups A and G interacted only with native alpha 2M, and those of group C reacted only with alpha 2M-trypsin complex. Binding of alpha 2M to group A streptococci was saturable and reversible. The dissociation constant was 2.02 X 10(-7) M, and the number of binding sites was calculated to be 18,000 per streptococcus. The alpha 2M-binding protein could be solubilized by treatment of group A streptococci with a murolytic enzyme and subsequently purified by affinity chromatography and high-pressure liquid chromatography. The purified protein was homogeneous on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and had a molecular weight of 78,000. It possessed no proteolytic activity and interacted with native alpha 2M in Western blots (immunoblots). Interaction of purified binding protein with alpha 2M led to a change in the conformation of alpha 2M similar to that obtained by alpha 2M-protease complexes. Reversible binding of a nonproteolytic streptococcal component of alpha 2M is thus a novel feature of alpha 2M reactivity.
Clumping of Staphylococcal aureus was observed in the presence of fibrinogen as well as fibronectin. In order to elucidate the mechanism of this clumping, binding of radiolabelled fibrinogen and fibronectin to S. aureus cultures was studied. Cultures of S. aureus reacted with 125I‐labelled fibrinogen as well as fibronectin. The binding of labelled fibrinogen to S. aureus could be completely inhibited by unlabelled fibronectin, whereas the binding of labelled fibronectin was only partially inhibited by unlabelled fibrinogen. This suggested an interaction of fibronectin with clumping factor which is the binding protein for fibrinogen in staphylococci. The clumping factor was purified from S. aureus strain K 807 by affinity chromatography on fibrinogen‐Sepharose followed by HPLC. The purified clumping factor inhibited the binding of fibrinogen and fibronectin to staphylococci. In western blots the purified clumping factor reacted with fibrinogen as well as fibronectin. Thus, the direct interaction of clumping factor with fibronectin might be responsible for the clumping of staphylococci in fibrinogen depleted plasma or serum.
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