Two major classes in the M protein family in group A streptococci
(1992) In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 89(18). p.8661-8665- Abstract
- The M protein family of molecules in the group A streptococcus comprises a number of cell surface proteins that interact with the immune system of the host. One of the proteins in this family is the IgA receptor Arp4, which has C repeats similar to those that characterize the known M proteins. The streptococcal strain expressing Arp4 also expresses a second immunoglobulin-binding protein, Mrp4, which is shown here to be encoded by a gene located immediately upstream of the gene for Arp4. In addition to binding IgG, Mrp4 also binds fibrinogen, a property ascribed to M proteins. DNA sequence analysis demonstrated that the Mrp4 protein indeed is a member of the M protein family, but it was unexpectedly found to have a type of repeat that is... (More)
- The M protein family of molecules in the group A streptococcus comprises a number of cell surface proteins that interact with the immune system of the host. One of the proteins in this family is the IgA receptor Arp4, which has C repeats similar to those that characterize the known M proteins. The streptococcal strain expressing Arp4 also expresses a second immunoglobulin-binding protein, Mrp4, which is shown here to be encoded by a gene located immediately upstream of the gene for Arp4. In addition to binding IgG, Mrp4 also binds fibrinogen, a property ascribed to M proteins. DNA sequence analysis demonstrated that the Mrp4 protein indeed is a member of the M protein family, but it was unexpectedly found to have a type of repeat that is identical to the A repeat described for FcRA76, a partially sequenced streptococcal Fc receptor. Purified FcRA76 was shown to bind fibrinogen and IgG, like Mrp4. These data show that the known molecules in the M protein family can be divided into two classes, A and C, according to the type of repeat region found. Hybridization studies with a panel of clinical isolates indicate that many streptococcal strains express class A and class C proteins, whereas some strains express only class C proteins. Class A molecules show amino-terminal sequence variation, like class C molecules, which suggests that proteins of both classes are targets for the immune response. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1106450
- author
- O'Toole, Paul W. ; Stenberg, Lars LU ; Rissler, Marianne LU and Lindahl, Gunnar LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 1992
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- volume
- 89
- issue
- 18
- pages
- 8661 - 8665
- publisher
- National Academy of Sciences
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:1528877
- scopus:0026700172
- ISSN
- 1091-6490
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- e8a3310f-87bc-4ae8-82e3-77e5c6e02809 (old id 1106450)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 12:28:58
- date last changed
- 2021-03-14 03:43:29
@article{e8a3310f-87bc-4ae8-82e3-77e5c6e02809, abstract = {{The M protein family of molecules in the group A streptococcus comprises a number of cell surface proteins that interact with the immune system of the host. One of the proteins in this family is the IgA receptor Arp4, which has C repeats similar to those that characterize the known M proteins. The streptococcal strain expressing Arp4 also expresses a second immunoglobulin-binding protein, Mrp4, which is shown here to be encoded by a gene located immediately upstream of the gene for Arp4. In addition to binding IgG, Mrp4 also binds fibrinogen, a property ascribed to M proteins. DNA sequence analysis demonstrated that the Mrp4 protein indeed is a member of the M protein family, but it was unexpectedly found to have a type of repeat that is identical to the A repeat described for FcRA76, a partially sequenced streptococcal Fc receptor. Purified FcRA76 was shown to bind fibrinogen and IgG, like Mrp4. These data show that the known molecules in the M protein family can be divided into two classes, A and C, according to the type of repeat region found. Hybridization studies with a panel of clinical isolates indicate that many streptococcal strains express class A and class C proteins, whereas some strains express only class C proteins. Class A molecules show amino-terminal sequence variation, like class C molecules, which suggests that proteins of both classes are targets for the immune response.}}, author = {{O'Toole, Paul W. and Stenberg, Lars and Rissler, Marianne and Lindahl, Gunnar}}, issn = {{1091-6490}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{18}}, pages = {{8661--8665}}, publisher = {{National Academy of Sciences}}, series = {{Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}}, title = {{Two major classes in the M protein family in group A streptococci}}, volume = {{89}}, year = {{1992}}, }