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© Institut Pasteur
Cells infected for 24 hrs with C. Trachomatis. The cell nuclei are labelled in blue, the bacteria appear yellow, within the inclusion lumen. A bacterial protein secreted out the inclusion into the host cytoplasm id labelled in red.
Publication : Molecular medicine (Cambridge, Mass.)

The multidrug transporters belonging to major facilitator superfamily in Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Molecular medicine (Cambridge, Mass.) - 01 Nov 2002

De Rossi E, Arrigo P, Bellinzoni M, Silva PA, Martín C, Aínsa JA, Guglierame P, Riccardi G,

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 12520088

Mol Med 2002 Nov; 8(11): 714-24

Both intrinsic and acquired multidrug resistance play an important role in the insurgence of tuberculosis. Detailed knowledge of the molecular basis of drug recognition and transport by multidrug transport systems is required for the development of new antibiotics that are not extruded or of inhibitors that block the multidrug transporter and allow traditional antibiotics to be effective.We have undertaken the inventory of the drug transporters subfamily, included in the major facilitator superfamily (MFS), encoded by the complete genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB). These proteins were identified on the basis of their characteristic stretches of amino acids and transmembrane segments (TMS) number.Genome analysis and searches of homology between the identified transporters and proteins characterized in other organisms revealed 16 open reading frames encoding putative drug efflux pumps belonging to MFS. In the case of two of them, we also have demonstrated that they function as drug efflux proteins.