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  4. Two Nucleus-Localized CDK-Like Kinases With Crucial Roles for Malaria Parasite Erythrocytic Replication Are Involved in Phosphorylation of Splicing Factor
 
research article

Two Nucleus-Localized CDK-Like Kinases With Crucial Roles for Malaria Parasite Erythrocytic Replication Are Involved in Phosphorylation of Splicing Factor

Agarwal, Shruti
•
Kern, Selina
•
Halbert, Jean
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2011
Journal Of Cellular Biochemistry

The kinome of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum comprises representatives of most eukaryotic protein kinase groups, including kinases which regulate proliferation and differentiation processes. Despite extensive research on most plasmodial enzymes, little information is available regarding the four identified members of the cyclin-dependent kinase-like kinase (CLK) family. In other eukaryotes, CLKs regulate mRNA splicing through phosphorylation of Serine/Arginine-rich proteins. Here, we investigate two of the PfCLKs, the Lammer kinase homolog PfCLK-1, and PfCLK-2. Both PfCLKs show homology with the yeast Serine/Arginine protein kinase Sky1p and are transcribed throughout the asexual blood stages and in gametocytes. PfCLK-1/Lammer possesses two nuclear localization signal sites and PfCLK-2 possesses one of these signal sites upstream of the C-terminal catalytic domains. Indirect immunofluorescence, Western blot, and electron microscopy data confirm that the kinases are primarily localized in the parasite nucleus, and PfCLK-2 is further present in the cytoplasm. The two kinases are important for completion of the asexual replication cycle of P. falciparum, as demonstrated by reverse genetics approaches. In vitro kinase assays show substrate phosphorylation by the PfCLKs, including the Sky1p substrate, splicing factor Npl3p, and the plasmodial alternative splicing factor PfASF-1. Mass spectrometric analysis of co-immunoprecipitated proteins indicates assembly of the two PfCLKs with proteins with predicted nuclease, phosphatase, or helicase functions. Our data indicate a crucial role of PfCLKs for malaria blood stage parasites, presumably by participating in gene regulation through the post-transcriptional modification of mRNA. J. Cell. Biochem. 112: 1295-1310, 2011. (C) 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/jcb.23034
Web of Science ID

WOS:000289361900008

Author(s)
Agarwal, Shruti
Kern, Selina
Halbert, Jean
Przyborski, Jude M.
Baumeister, Stefan
Dandekar, Thomas
Doerig, Christian  
Pradel, Gabriele
Date Issued

2011

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Published in
Journal Of Cellular Biochemistry
Volume

112

Issue

5

Start page

1295

End page

1310

Subjects

Malaria

•

Kinome

•

mRNA SPLICING

•

Transcription

•

Sr Protein

•

Gene Regulation

•

Phosphorylation

•

Plasmodium-Falciparum

•

Protein-Kinase

•

Sexual Stage

•

Messenger-Rna

•

Host-Cell

•

Domains

•

Transmission

•

Maturation

•

Mosquito

•

Targets

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
INSERM-EPFL  
Available on Infoscience
December 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/74237
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