Structure of the essential Plasmodium host cell traversal protein SPECT1.

Host cell traversal by Plasmodium, the protozoan cause of malaria, is an essential part of this parasite's virulence. In this process, the parasite enters a host cell through a parasite-induced pore, traverses the host cell, and then exits the host cell. Two P. berghei proteins, SPECT1 and SPEC...

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Main Authors: Brent Y Hamaoka, Partho Ghosh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114685
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spelling doaj-5f33556b49d0422b8ee5931e95ee56b62021-03-03T20:11:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01912e11468510.1371/journal.pone.0114685Structure of the essential Plasmodium host cell traversal protein SPECT1.Brent Y HamaokaPartho GhoshHost cell traversal by Plasmodium, the protozoan cause of malaria, is an essential part of this parasite's virulence. In this process, the parasite enters a host cell through a parasite-induced pore, traverses the host cell, and then exits the host cell. Two P. berghei proteins, SPECT1 and SPECT2, are required for host cell traversal by the sporozoite form of the parasite. In the absence of either, no pore formation is observed. While SPECT2 has sequence homology to pore-forming proteins, SPECT1 has no homology to proteins of known structure or function. Here we present the 2.75 Å resolution structure of a slightly truncated version of P. berghei SPECT1. The structure reveals that the protein forms a four-helix bundle, with the rare feature of having all of these helices in parallel or antiparallel alignment. Also notable is the presence of a large, conserved, hydrophobic internal cavity in the protein, which may constitute a ligand-binding site or be indicative of partial instability in SPECT1, or both. The structure of SPECT1 will make possible targeted mutagenesis experiments aimed at understanding its mechanism of action in host cell traversal.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114685
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brent Y Hamaoka
Partho Ghosh
spellingShingle Brent Y Hamaoka
Partho Ghosh
Structure of the essential Plasmodium host cell traversal protein SPECT1.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Brent Y Hamaoka
Partho Ghosh
author_sort Brent Y Hamaoka
title Structure of the essential Plasmodium host cell traversal protein SPECT1.
title_short Structure of the essential Plasmodium host cell traversal protein SPECT1.
title_full Structure of the essential Plasmodium host cell traversal protein SPECT1.
title_fullStr Structure of the essential Plasmodium host cell traversal protein SPECT1.
title_full_unstemmed Structure of the essential Plasmodium host cell traversal protein SPECT1.
title_sort structure of the essential plasmodium host cell traversal protein spect1.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Host cell traversal by Plasmodium, the protozoan cause of malaria, is an essential part of this parasite's virulence. In this process, the parasite enters a host cell through a parasite-induced pore, traverses the host cell, and then exits the host cell. Two P. berghei proteins, SPECT1 and SPECT2, are required for host cell traversal by the sporozoite form of the parasite. In the absence of either, no pore formation is observed. While SPECT2 has sequence homology to pore-forming proteins, SPECT1 has no homology to proteins of known structure or function. Here we present the 2.75 Å resolution structure of a slightly truncated version of P. berghei SPECT1. The structure reveals that the protein forms a four-helix bundle, with the rare feature of having all of these helices in parallel or antiparallel alignment. Also notable is the presence of a large, conserved, hydrophobic internal cavity in the protein, which may constitute a ligand-binding site or be indicative of partial instability in SPECT1, or both. The structure of SPECT1 will make possible targeted mutagenesis experiments aimed at understanding its mechanism of action in host cell traversal.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114685
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