TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of a new export signal in Plasmodium yoelii
T2 - Identification of a new exportome
AU - Siau, Anthony
AU - Huang, Ximei
AU - Yam, Xue Yan
AU - Bob, Ndeye Sakha
AU - Sun, Hequan
AU - Rajapakse, Jagath C.
AU - Renia, Laurent
AU - Preiser, Peter R.
PY - 2014/5
Y1 - 2014/5
N2 - Development of the erythrocytic malaria parasite requires targeting of parasite proteins into multiple compartments located within and beyond the parasite confine. Beyond the PEXEL/VTS pathway and its characterized players, increasing amount of evidence has highlighted the existence of proteins exported using alternative export-signal(s)/pathway(s); hence, the exportomes currently predicted are incomplete. The nature of these exported proteins which could have a prominent role in most of the Plasmodium species remains elusive. Using P.yoelii variant proteins, we identified a signal associated to lipophilic region that mediates export of P.yoelii proteins. This non-PEXEL signal termed PLASMED is defined by semi-conserved residues and possibly a secondary structure. In vivo characterization of exported-proteins indicated that PLASMED is a bona fide export-signal that allowed us to identify an unseen P.yoelii exportome. The repertoire of the newly predicted exported proteins opens up perspectives for unravelling the remodelling of the host-cell by the parasite, against which new therapies could be elaborated.
AB - Development of the erythrocytic malaria parasite requires targeting of parasite proteins into multiple compartments located within and beyond the parasite confine. Beyond the PEXEL/VTS pathway and its characterized players, increasing amount of evidence has highlighted the existence of proteins exported using alternative export-signal(s)/pathway(s); hence, the exportomes currently predicted are incomplete. The nature of these exported proteins which could have a prominent role in most of the Plasmodium species remains elusive. Using P.yoelii variant proteins, we identified a signal associated to lipophilic region that mediates export of P.yoelii proteins. This non-PEXEL signal termed PLASMED is defined by semi-conserved residues and possibly a secondary structure. In vivo characterization of exported-proteins indicated that PLASMED is a bona fide export-signal that allowed us to identify an unseen P.yoelii exportome. The repertoire of the newly predicted exported proteins opens up perspectives for unravelling the remodelling of the host-cell by the parasite, against which new therapies could be elaborated.
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U2 - 10.1111/cmi.12293
DO - 10.1111/cmi.12293
M3 - Article
C2 - 24636637
AN - SCOPUS:84898484806
SN - 1462-5814
VL - 16
SP - 673
EP - 686
JO - Cellular Microbiology
JF - Cellular Microbiology
IS - 5
ER -