Abstract

Escherichia coli B, grown in iron-rich media, were more resistant toward the aerobic bactericidal action of the formed elements of blood than were comparable iron-deficient cells. The iron replete cells contained 2.5 times more ferrisuperoxide dismutase, 12 times more peroxidase, and 1.5 times more catalase than did the iron-deficient cells. The iron-deficient cells were more susceptible to exogenous O 2 − and to H 2O 2 than were iron-replete cells. Cyanide permitted a differentiation between ferrisuperoxide dismutase and catalase or peroxidase since it inhibited the latter peroxide-consuming enzymes but had no effect on the superoxide-utilizing enzyme. In the presence of 2 m m cyanide, the iron-replete E. coli were much more resistant toward phagocytic kill than were the iron-deficient cells even though this level of cyanide completely inhibited catalase and peroxidase. It can be concluded that a large part of the enhanced resistance toward phagocytic kill, exhibited by iron-replete E. coli B, was due to their increased content of the periplasmic ferrisuperoxide dismutase. It follows that O 2 − is probably an important agent in the killing of phagocytized E. coli B.

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