Mycobacterium tuberculosis expresses two chaperonin-60 homologs

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Abstract

A 65-kDa protein and a 10-kDa protein are two of the more strongly immunoreactive components of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis. The 65-kDa antigen has homology with members of the GroEL or chaperonin-60 (Cpn60) family of heat shock proteins. The 10-kDa antigen has homology with the GroES or chaperonin-10 family of heat shock proteins. These two proteins are encoded by separate genes in M. tuberculosis. The studies reported here reveal that M. tuberculosis contains a second Cpn60 homolog located 98 bp downstream of the 10-kDa antigen gene. The second Cpn60 homolog (Cpn60-1) displays 61% amino acid sequence identity with the 65-kDa antigen (Cpn60-2) and 53% and 41% identity with the Escherichia coli GroEL protein and the human P60 protein, respectively. Primer-extension analysis revealed that transcription starts 29 bp upstream of the translation start of the Cpn60-1 homolog and protein purification studies indicate that the cpn60-1 gene is expressed as an ≈60-kDa polypeptide.

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Kong, T. H., Coates, A. R. M., Butcher, P. D., Hickman, C. J., & Shinnick, T. M. (1993). Mycobacterium tuberculosis expresses two chaperonin-60 homologs. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 90(7), 2608–2612. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.90.7.2608

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