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BMC Biology 2012
Involvement of Plasmodium falciparum protein kinase CK2 in the chromatin assembly pathwayAbstract: We now show that the genes encoding both regulatory PfCK2 subunits (PfCK2β1 and PfCK2β2) cannot be disrupted. Using immunofluorescence and electron microscopy, we examined the intra-erythrocytic stages of transgenic parasite lines expressing hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged catalytic and regulatory subunits (HA-CK2α, HA-PfCK2β1 or HA-PfCK2β2), and localized all three subunits to both cytoplasmic and nuclear compartments of the parasite. The same transgenic parasite lines were used to purify PfCK2β1- and PfCK2β2-containing complexes, which were analyzed by mass spectrometry. The recovered proteins were unevenly distributed between various pathways, with a large proportion of components of the chromatin assembly pathway being present in both PfCK2β1 and PfCK2β2 precipitates, implicating PfCK2 in chromatin dynamics. We also found that chromatin-related substrates such as nucleosome assembly proteins (Naps), histones, and two members of the Alba family are phosphorylated by PfCK2α in vitro.Our reverse-genetics data show that each of the two regulatory PfCK2 subunits is required for completion of the asexual erythrocytic cycle. Our interactome study points to an implication of PfCK2 in many cellular pathways, with chromatin dynamics being identified as a major process regulated by PfCK2. This study paves the way for a kinome-wide interactomics-based approach to elucidate protein kinase function in malaria parasites.Malaria, a disease caused by parasitic protozoa of the genus Plasmodium (phylum Apicomplexa), is responsible for the death of one million people every year, mostly children living in sub-Saharan Africa [1]. The burden of morbidity and mortality inflicted by this disease presents a serious hindrance to socioeconomic development, causing up to a 1.3% decrease in the gross domestic product of countries with a high malaria rate [2]. The number of deaths due to malaria doubled in the last two decades of the 20th century, with one of the primary reasons being the spread of
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