Publication | Closed Access
Lipid modification of the 15 kilo Dalton major membrane immunogen of <i>Treponema pallidum</i>
35
Citations
50
References
1990
Year
Lipid AnalysisProteinlipid InteractionImmunologyAntigen ProcessingMembrane AttachmentImmunotherapySynthetic ImmunologyFatty AcidsMature ProteinBiochemistryMembrane BiologyLipid ScienceLipid ModificationLipid PreparationNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryPathogenesisProtein EngineeringLipid ChemistryMedicine
The 15 kiloDalton major membrane immunogen was included among the Treponema pallidum polypeptides selectively labelled with [3H]-palmitate. The cloned gene for this immunogen, tpp15, encoded a signal peptide of 17 amino acids, a consensus signal peptidase II cleavage site, and a mature protein of 124 amino acids (13,967 Daltons). As predicted by the DNA sequence, the recombinant 15 kiloDalton immunogen labelled selectively with [3H]-palmitate, and globomycin inhibited processing of the precursor to the mature polypeptide. While the native and recombinant immunogens are amphiphilic, the 15 kiloDalton immunogen synthesized in a cell-free system was hydrophilic. The covalent attachment of fatty acids appears to be responsible for the amphiphilicity of the immunogen and its membrane attachment.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1