@article{6323, keywords = {Amino Acid Sequence, Antigens, Bacterial, B-Lymphocytes, Bacterial Proteins, Base Sequence, Blotting, Western, Carrier Proteins, Cell Line, DNA, Bacterial, DNA, Recombinant, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Gene Expression, Humans, Lymphocyte Activation, Molecular Sequence Data, Mycobacterium leprae, Receptors, Fibronectin, Receptors, Immunologic, T-Lymphocytes}, author = {Thole J E and Schöningh R and Janson A A and Garbe T and Cornelisse Y E and Clark-Curtiss J E and Kolk A H and Ottenhoff T H and Vries R R and Abou-Zeid C}, title = {Molecular and immunological analysis of a fibronectin-binding protein antigen secreted by Mycobacterium leprae.}, abstract = {

By screening a Mycobacterium leprae lambda gt11 genomic DNA library with leprosy-patient sera we have previously identified 50 recombinant clones that expressed novel M. leprae antigens (Sathish et al., 1990). In this study, we show by DNA sequencing and immunoblot analysis that three of these clones express a M. leprae homologue of the fibronectin-binding antigen 85 complex of mycobacteria. The complete gene was characterized and it encodes a 327-amino-acid polypeptide, consisting of a consensus signal sequence of 38 amino acids followed by a mature protein of 289 amino acids. This is the first sequence of a member of the M. leprae antigen 85 complex, and Southern blotting analysis indicated the presence of multiple genes of the 85 complex in the genome of M. leprae. The amino acid sequence displays 75-85% sequence identity with components of the antigen 85 complex from M. tuberculosis, M. bovis BCG and M. kansasii. Furthermore, antibodies to the antigen 85 complex of M. tuberculosis and M. bovis BCG reacted with two fusion proteins containing the amino acid regions 55-266 and 266-327 of the M. leprae protein. The M. leprae 30/31 kDa protein induces strong humoral and cellular responses, as judged by Western blot analysis with patient sera and proliferation of T cells derived from healthy individuals and leprosy patients. Amino acid regions 55-266 and 265-327 both were shown to bind to fibronectin, indicating the presence of at least two fibronectin-binding sites on the M. leprae protein. These data indicate that this 30/31 kDa protein is not only important in the immune response against M. leprae, but may also have a biological role in the interaction of this bacillus with the human host.

}, year = {1992}, journal = {Molecular microbiology}, volume = {6}, pages = {153-63}, month = {1992 Jan}, issn = {0950-382X}, doi = {10.1111/j.1365-2958.1992.tb01996.x}, language = {eng}, }