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Structural and evolutionary adaptation of rhoptry kinases and pseudokinases, a family of coccidian virulence factors

Title: Structural and evolutionary adaptation of rhoptry kinases and pseudokinases, a family of coccidian virulence factors
Authors: Talevich, Eric; Kannan, Natarajan
Publisher Information: BioMed Central Ltd.
Publication Year: 2013
Collection: BioMed Central
Description: Background The widespread protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii interferes with host cell functions by exporting the contents of a unique apical organelle, the rhoptry. Among the mix of secreted proteins are an expanded, lineage-specific family of protein kinases termed rhoptry kinases (ROPKs), several of which have been shown to be key virulence factors, including the pseudokinase ROP5. The extent and details of the diversification of this protein family are poorly understood. Results In this study, we comprehensively catalogued the ROPK family in the genomes of Toxoplasma gondii , Neospora caninum and Eimeria tenella , as well as portions of the unfinished genome of Sarcocystis neurona , and classified the identified genes into 42 distinct subfamilies. We systematically compared the rhoptry kinase protein sequences and structures to each other and to the broader superfamily of eukaryotic protein kinases to study the patterns of diversification and neofunctionalization in the ROPK family and its subfamilies. We identified three ROPK sub-clades of particular interest: those bearing a structurally conserved N-terminal extension to the kinase domain (NTE), an E. tenella -specific expansion, and a basal cluster including ROP35 and BPK1 that we term ROPKL. Structural analysis in light of the solved structures ROP2, ROP5, ROP8 and in comparison to typical eukaryotic protein kinases revealed ROPK-specific conservation patterns in two key regions of the kinase domain, surrounding a ROPK-conserved insert in the kinase hinge region and a disulfide bridge in the kinase substrate-binding lobe. We also examined conservation patterns specific to the NTE-bearing clade. We discuss the possible functional consequences of each. Conclusions Our work sheds light on several important but previously unrecognized features shared among rhoptry kinases, as well as the essential differences between active and degenerate protein kinases. We identify the most distinctive ROPK-specific features conserved across both active kinases ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
Relation: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/13/117
Availability: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/13/117
Rights: Copyright 2013 Talevich and Kannan; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Accession Number: edsbas.7C73086B
Database: BASE