Journal article

N-terminal positively charged amino acids, but not their exact position, are important for apicoplast transit peptide fidelity in Toxoplasma gondii

CJ Tonkin, DS Roos, GI McFadden

Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | ELSEVIER | Published : 2006

Abstract

The non-photosynthetic plastid - or apicoplast - of Toxoplasma gondii and other apicomplexan parasites is an essential organelle and promising drug target. Most apicoplast proteins are encoded in the nucleus and targeted into the organelle through the apicoplast's four membranes courtesy of a bipartite N-terminal leader sequence comprising of an endomembrane signal peptide followed by a plastid transit peptide. Apicoplast transit peptides, like plant plastid transit peptides, have no primary consensus, are variable in length and may be distinguishable only by a relative depletion of negative charged residues and consequent enrichment in basic residues. In this study we examine the role of ch..

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University of Melbourne Researchers