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Plasmodium centrin PbCEN-4 localizes to the putative MTOC and is dispensable for malaria parasite proliferation

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-05-13, 13:40 authored by M Roques, R Stanway, E Rea, R Markus, D Brady, H Anthony, D Guttery, R Tewari
Centrins are calmodulin-like phosphoproteins present in the centrosome and play an active role in the duplication, separation and organization of centrosomal structures such as the microtubule-organizing centre (MTOC) during mitosis. They are also major components of the basal body of flagella and cilia. In Plasmodium spp., the parasite that causes malaria, mitosis is closed during asexual replication and the MTOC is embedded within the intact nuclear membrane. The MTOC has been named the centriolar plaque and is similar to the spindle pole body in yeast. In all phases of asexual replication, repeated rounds of nuclear division precede cell division. However, our knowledge of the location and function of centrins during this process is limited. Previous studies have identified four putative centrins in the human parasite Plasmodium falciparum. We report here the cellular localization of an alveolate-specific centrin (PbCEN-4) during the atypical cell division of asexual replicative stages, using live cell imaging with the rodent malaria parasite P. berghei as a model system. We show that this centrin forms a multi-protein complex with other centrins, but is dispensable for parasite proliferation.

Funding

This work was supported by the Medical Research Council [grant numbers G0900109, G0900278, MR/K011782/1]; and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [grant number BB/N017609/1]. M.R. was supported by an European Molecular Biology Organisation (EMBO)-Long Term fellowship (597-2014). A.A.H. was supported by the Francis Crick Institute which receives its core funding from Cancer Research UK (FC001097), the UK Medical Research Council (FC001097) and the Wellcome Trust (FC001097). Super resolution microscopy was done at the School of Life Sciences Imaging and Microscopy (SLIM), Nottingham University; the super resolution microscope facility was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council BB/L013827/1 grant.

History

Citation

Biology Open, 2019, 8, bio036822

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Cancer Research Centre

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Biology Open

Publisher

Company of Biologists

issn

2046-6390

Acceptance date

2018-11-15

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-05-13

Publisher version

http://bio.biologists.org/content/8/1/bio036822

Notes

Supplementary information available online at http://bio.biologists.org/lookup/doi/10.1242/bio.036822.supplemental

Language

en

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