Abstract

We studied post- and pre-embedding staining of sugar-binding sites on thin sections of Staphylococcus aureus with an electron microscopic neoglycoprotein-gold technique. Although gold particles of cellobiosyl bovine serum albumin (BSA)-glycosylated BSA-, lactosyl BSA-, and melibiosyl BSA-gold did not label, heavy labeling of N-acetylglucosaminide-BSA-gold was observed in both the cell wall and the cytoplasm on Spurr-embedded thin sections of S. aureus. Inhibition of labeling with wheat germ agglutinin-biotin and N-acetylglucosaminidase indicated that the labeling was due to N-acetylglucosamine. These data suggested that molecules that bind specifically with N-acetylglucosamine occur in the cell wall and cytoplasm of S. aureus. Pre-embedding staining revealed that these molecules are abundant at the surface of the cell wall and that the abundance differs depending on the bacterial strain. An N-acetylglucosamine-specific lectin-like substance, glucosaminidase, and toxins are proposed as candidates for molecules responsible for the labeling, and the possible functional significance of the findings is discussed briefly.

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