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p67: a cryptic lysosomal hydrolase in Trypanosoma brucei?

Journal

PARASITOLOGY
Volume 148, Issue 10, Pages 1271-1276

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S003118202000195X

Keywords

Lysosome; N-terminal nucleophile; p67; phospholipase B-like; trypanosome

Categories

Funding

  1. United States Public Health Service Grants [R01 AI056866]
  2. Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences

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p67 is a type I transmembrane glycoprotein located in the terminal lysosome of African trypanosomes. Knockdown of p67 is lethal, resulting in an enlarged lysosome. Orthologues of p67 have been identified in Dictyostelium and mammals, and are believed to possess phospholipase B-like activity.
p67 is a type I transmembrane glycoprotein of the terminal lysosome of African trypanosomes. Its biosynthesis involves transport of an initial gp100 ER precursor to the lysosome, followed by cleavage to N-terminal (gp32) and C-terminal (gp42) subunits that remain non-covalently associated. p67 knockdown is lethal, but the only overt phenotype is an enlarged lysosome (similar to 250 to >1000 nm). Orthologues have been characterized in Dictyostelium and mammals. These have processing pathways similar to p67, and are thought to have phospholipase B-like (PLBL) activity. The mouse PLBD2 crystal structure revealed that the PLBLs represent a subgroup of the larger N-terminal nucleophile (NTN) superfamily, all of which are hydrolases. NTNs activate by internal autocleavage mediated by a nucleophilic residue, i.e. Cys, Ser or Thr, on the upstream peptide bond to form N-terminal alpha (gp32) and C-terminal beta (gp42) subunits that remain non-covalently associated. The N-terminal residue of the beta subunit is then catalytic in subsequent hydrolysis reactions. All PLBLs have a conserved Cys/Ser dipeptide at the alpha/beta junction (Cys241/Ser242 in p67), mutation of which renders p67 non-functional in RNAi rescue assays. p67 orthologues are found in many clades of parasitic protozoa, thus p67 is the founding member of a group of hydrolases that likely play a role broadly in the pathogenesis of parasitic infections.

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