Journal article
The Putative Bromodomain Protein PfBDP7 of the Human Malaria Parasite Plasmodium Falciparum Cooperates With PfBDP1 in the Silencing of Variant Surface Antigen Expression
JE Quinn, MD Jeninga, K Limm, K Pareek, T Meißgeier, A Bachmann, MF Duffy, M Petter
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology | Published : 2022
Abstract
Epigenetic regulation is a critical mechanism in controlling virulence, differentiation, and survival of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium (P.) falciparum. Bromodomain proteins contribute to this process by binding to acetylated lysine residues of histones and thereby targeting the gene regulatory machinery to gene promoters. A protein complex containing the P. falciparum bromodomain proteins (PfBDP) 1 and PfBDP2 (BDP1/BDP2 core complex) was previously shown to play an essential role for the correct transcription of invasion related genes. Here, we performed a functional characterization of a third component of this complex, which we dubbed PfBDP7, because structural modelling predicted ..
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Awarded by Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst
Funding Acknowledgements
This works was supported by the German Research foundation (DFG) through project grants number PE 1618/2-1 and PE 1618/4-1, by the NHMRC Australian (project grant APP1084580), by the DAAD/Universities Australia joint research cooperation scheme and by the German Society of Parasitology (DGP) through a travel fellowship for JQ.