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Characterization of a Fasciola gigantica protein carrying two DM9 domains reveals cellular relocalization property

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:23 authored by Wansika Phadungsil, Peter SmookerPeter Smooker, Suksiri Vichasri-Grams, Rudi Grams
Even at the present age of whole-organism analysis, e.g., genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics, the biological roles of many proteins remain unresolved. Classified among the proteins of unknown function is a family of proteins harboring repeats of the DM9 domain, a 60-75 amino acids motif first described in a small number of Drosophila melanogaster proteins. Proteins may carry two or more DM9 domains either in combination with other domains or as their sole constituent. Here we have characterized a 16.8 kDa Fasciola gigantica protein comprising two tandem repeated DM9 domains (FgDM9-1). The protein was located in the parenchyma of the immature and mature parasite and consequently it was not detected in the ES product of the parasite but only in the whole worm extract. Interestingly, extraction with SDS yielded a substantially higher amount of the protein suggesting association with insoluble cell components. In Sf9 insect cells a heterologously expressed EGFP-FgDM9-1 chimera showed cell-wide distribution but relocated to vesicle-like structures in the cytoplasm after stimulating cellular stress by bacteria, heat shock or chloroquine. These structures did not colocalize with the markers of endocytosis/phagocytosis ubiquitin, RAB7, GABARAP. The same behavior was noted for Aedes aegypti PRS1, a homologous mosquito DM9 protein as a positive control while EGFP did not exhibit such relocation in the insect cells. Cross-linking experiments on soluble recombinant FgDM9-1 indicated that the protein can undergo specific oligomerization. It is speculated that proteins carrying the DM9 domain have a role in vesicular transport in flatworms and insects.

History

Journal

Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology

Volume

205

Issue

42401

Start page

6

End page

15

Total pages

10

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 Elsevier BV

Former Identifier

2006061637

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-05-12

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