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JBC, Vol. 250, Issue 22, 8712-8719, Nov, 1975
F. Dorner
Enterotoxin, a diarrheagenic protein elaborated by pathogenic Escherichia
coli strains has been isolated from the supernatant of fermenter cultures
of E. coli strain P263, a porcine enteropathogen. Purification steps
involving Bio-Gel agarose A-5m, Sephadex G-75 chromatography, and
preparative isotachophoresis were used in the isolation. The resulting
product appears to be pure according to immunoelectrophoretic, disc
electrophoretic, ultracentrifugal, and immunologic criteria. The entertoxin
has an apparent molecular weight of 102,000 as judged by gel filtration and
sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and its
isoelectric point is 6.90. The isolated product is highly active in
inducing experimental diarrhea in adult rabbits and piglets. It also
elicits, in small dosage, a marked increase in adenylate cyclase activity
in broken cell preparations of cat heart tissue. The enterotoxin activity
is acid-labile and is destroyed by heating at 65 degrees for 30 min. It is
suggested that the heat-stable enterotoxin material is derived from
heat-labile enterotoxin by forming a complex with endotoxin or capsular
material present in the culture supernatant.
Escherichia coli enterotoxin. Purification and partial characterization
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