From adhesion to invasion: the multifaceted roles of <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> lipoproteins
Li M, Zhang Q, Wang Y, Xie J, Liang T, Liu Z, Xiang X, Zhou Q, et al. (9 authors)
Journal of drug targeting · 2025-03
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis , which poses a significant threat to human health. Lipoproteins are predominantly found in the M. tuberculosis cell wall during infection of the invading host. The cell wall interacts closely with the host cell in direct contact. The M. tuberculosis genome encodes at least 99 lipoproteins with diverse functions, including ABC transport, cell wall metabolism, adhesion, cell invasion, and signal transduction, among others. Different lipoproteins play important roles in bacterial survival, infection of host cells, vaccine development, and gene regulation for drug targeting. Although only a subset of these lipoproteins has been functionally investigated, most of them require further study. This review summarises the progress of research related to the synthesis of M. tuberculosis lipoproteins and their involvement in the functions of material transport, immune response, virulence mechanism, vaccine development, signalling, enzyme, and drug regulation.
MeSH terms
- Cell Wall
- Animals
- Humans
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis
- Lipoproteins
- Bacterial Proteins
- Bacterial Adhesion
- Virulence