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Volume 90, Issue 2, Pages 119-124 (March 2010)


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Multiple moonlighting functions of mycobacterial molecular chaperones

Brian HendersonaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Peter A. Lundb, Anthony R.M. Coatesc

Received 18 November 2009; received in revised form 14 January 2010; accepted 26 January 2010. published online 25 March 2010.

Summary 

Molecular chaperones and protein folding catalysts are normally thought of as intracellular proteins involved in protein folding quality control. However, in the mycobacteria there is increasing evidence to support the hypothesis that molecular chaperones are also secreted intercellular signalling molecules or can control actions at the cell wall or indeed control the composition of the cell wall. The most recent evidence for protein moonlighting in the mycobacteria is the report that chaperonin 60.2 of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is important in the key event in tuberculosis – the entry of the bacterium into the macrophage. This brief overview highlights the potential importance of the moonlighting functions of molecular chaperones in the biology and pathobiology of the mycobacteria.

a Department of Microbial Diseases, UCL-Eastman Dental Institute, University College London, 256 Gray's Inn Road, London WC1X 8LD, United Kingdom

b School of Bioscience, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom

c Centre of Infection, Division of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, St George's University of London, London, United Kingdom

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +44 207 915 1190.

PII: S1472-9792(10)00016-8

doi:10.1016/j.tube.2010.01.004


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