Home
Scholarly Works
The Role of Palmitoylation for Protein Recruitment...
Journal article

The Role of Palmitoylation for Protein Recruitment to the Inner Membrane Complex of the Malaria Parasite*

Abstract

To survive and persist within its human host, the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum utilizes a battery of lineage-specific innovations to invade and multiply in human erythrocytes. With central roles in invasion and cytokinesis, the inner membrane complex, a Golgi-derived double membrane structure underlying the plasma membrane of the parasite, represents a unique and unifying structure characteristic to all organisms belonging to a large phylogenetic group called Alveolata. More than 30 structurally and phylogenetically distinct proteins are embedded in the IMC, where a portion of these proteins displays N-terminal acylation motifs. Although N-terminal myristoylation is catalyzed co-translationally within the cytoplasm of the parasite, palmitoylation takes place at membranes and is mediated by palmitoyl acyltransferases (PATs). Here, we identify a PAT (PfDHHC1) that is exclusively localized to the IMC. Systematic phylogenetic analysis of the alveolate PAT family reveals PfDHHC1 to be a member of a highly conserved, apicomplexan-specific clade of PATs. We show that during schizogony this enzyme has an identical distribution like two dual-acylated, IMC-localized proteins (PfISP1 and PfISP3). We used these proteins to probe into specific sequence requirements for IMC-specific membrane recruitment and their interaction with differentially localized PATs of the parasite.

Authors

Wetzel J; Herrmann S; Swapna LS; Prusty D; John Peter AT; Kono M; Saini S; Nellimarla S; Wong TWY; Wilcke L

Journal

Journal of Biological Chemistry, Vol. 290, No. 3, pp. 1712–1728

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 16, 2015

DOI

10.1074/jbc.m114.598094

ISSN

0021-9258

Contact the Experts team