Sp. Rao et al., IDENTIFICATION OF A 68 KD SURFACE-ANTIGEN OF MYCOBACTERIUM-AVIUM THATBINDS TO HUMAN MACROPHAGES, The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine, 123(4), 1994, pp. 526-535
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Medical Laboratory Technology","Medicine, General & Internal
Infection caused by Mycobacterium avium is the major cause of bacterem
ia in patients with AIDS. A critical event in the initiation of a vari
ety of bacterial infections is the adherence of bacteria to host cell
surfaces, which is often brought about by the interaction of specific
molecules on the bacterial surface with host cell surface receptors. I
n the present study, a sonicate of M. avium was used to isolate monocy
te-binbing proteins by affinity chromatography with CNBr-Sepharose-4B
coupled to extracts of monocytes. A 68 kd protein present on the surfa
ce of M. avium was identified as one of nine monocyte-binding proteins
. This protein was isolated and further characterized. The N-terminal
amino acid sequence (22 residues) of the protein was determined and wa
s found to exhibit strong homology with the 65 kd heat shock proteins
of M. tuberculosis, M. leprae, and M. bovis. However, a previously cha
racterized monoclonal antibody directed against a 66 kd antigen of M.
avium was found to cross-react with the 68 kd protein from M. avium bu
t not with the 65 kd proteins from M. leprae and M. bovis, suggesting
that the 68 kd antigen may differ from the 65 kd proteins of M. leprae
and M. bovis with respect to certain epitopes. In an in vitro inhibit
ion assay, the 68 kd protein was found to compete with the attachment
of intact fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled M. avium to monocyte-deri
ved macrophages, inhibiting this attachment in a dose-dependent manner
up to 42%. The 65 kd proteins of M. leprae and M. bovis, on the other
hand, did not appear to inhibit this attachment substantially (13.9%
and 14.6%, respectively). These results suggest that the 68 kd protein
of M. avium may be involved in binding to receptors on macrophages an
d help in the attachment of the organism to its host cell.