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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, Nov 1995, 657-664, Vol 2, No. 6
FA el-Zaatari, SA Naser, L Engstrand, PE Burch, CY Hachem, DL Whipple and DY Graham
Mycobacterium paratuberculosis is the causative agent of Johne's disease, a
chronic enteritis in ruminants. It has also been implicated as a possible
cause of Crohn's disease, an inflammatory bowel disease of unknown
etiology. The mycobacterial 65K heat shock proteins (hsp- 65K) are among
the most extensively studied mycobacterial proteins, and their immunogenic
characteristics have been suggested to be the basis for autoimmunization in
chronic inflammatory diseases. In this context, we isolated and sequenced
the hsp-65K-encoding gene from our M. paratuberculosis PTB65K genomic
library. A high degree of identity was found between the open reading frame
(ORF) of the PTB65K gene and those of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (89.6%),
Mycobacterium leprae (86.6%), and Mycobacterium avium 18 (98.8%). The amino
acid sequence alignment of the PTB65K protein with the hsp-65K homologs
revealed that the M. tuberculosis and M. leprae proteins each differed by
36 amino acid residues and that the M. avium 18 protein differed by 8
residues. We also investigated the humoral immune responses of animals with
Johne's disease and patients with Crohn's disease against the recombinant
PTB65K antigen. Immunoblot analysis showed that sera from only 3 of 10
clinically ill and 5 of 25 subclinically ill cows reacted with PTB65K. In
addition, sera from two of two sheep and one of two goats with clinical
symptoms of Johne's disease also reacted with PTB65K; 0 samples from 10
normal cows reacted. In humans, sera from 7 of 13 patients with Crohn's
disease, 3 of 4 with tuberculosis, 5 of 6 with leprosy, 5 of 12 with
non-inflammatory bowel disease, and 0 of 4 with ulcerative colitis reacted
with the recombinant PTB65K antigen. These results indicate that this
PTB65K heat shock protein is uninformative when used for serodiagnosis of
Johne's disease in animals. However, in humans, the high intensity of
antibody reactions of some sera from Crohn's disease patients compared with
that from noninflammatory bowel disease patients showed a positive
correlation with mycobacterial diseases.
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Nucleotide sequence analysis and seroreactivities of the 65K heat shock protein from Mycobacterium paratuberculosis
Inflammatory Bowel Disease Laboratory, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
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