Journal article

Protein kinase A is essential for invasion of Plasmodium falciparum into human erythrocytes

ML Wilde, T Triglia, D Marapana, JK Thompson, AA Kouzmitchev, HE Bullen, PR Gilson, AF Cowman, CJ Tonkina

Mbio | AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY | Published : 2019

Abstract

Understanding the mechanisms behind host cell invasion by Plasmodium falciparum remains a major hurdle to developing antimalarial therapeutics that target the asexual cycle and the symptomatic stage of malaria. Host cell entry is enabled by a multitude of precisely timed and tightly regulated receptor-ligand interactions. Cyclic nucleotide signaling has been implicated in regulating parasite invasion, and an important downstream effector of the cAMP-signaling pathway is protein kinase A (PKA), a cAMP-dependent protein kinase. There is increasing evidence that P. falciparum PKA (PfPKA) is responsible for phosphorylation of the cytoplasmic domain of P. falciparum apical membrane antigen 1 (PfA..

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