Abstract
Genome sequencing revealed an extreme AT-rich genome and a profusion of asparagine repeats associated with low complexity regions (LCRs) in proteins of the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Despite their abundance, the function of these LCRs remains unclear. Because they occur in almost all families of plasmodial proteins, the occurrence of LCRs cannot be associated with any specific metabolic pathway; yet their accumulation must have given selective advantages to the parasite. Translation of these asparagine-rich LCRs demands extraordinarily high amounts of asparaginylated tRNAAsn. However, unlike other organisms,Plasmodiumcodonbias is not correlated totRNA gene copy number. Here,westudiedtRNAAsn accumulation as well as the catalytic capacities of the asparaginyl-tRNA synthetase of the parasite in vitro. We observed that asparaginylation in this parasite can be considered standard, which is expected to limit the availability of asparaginylated tRNAAsn in the cell and, in turn, slow down the ribosomal translation rate when decoding asparagine repeats. This observation strengthens our earlier hypothesis considering that asparagine rich sequences act as "tRNA sponges" and help cotranslational folding of parasite proteins. However, it also raises many questions about the mechanistic aspects of the synthesis of asparagine repeats and about their implications in the global control of protein expression throughout Plasmodium life cycle.
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CITATION STYLE
Filisetti, D., Théobald-Dietrich, A., Mahmoudi, N., Rudinger-Thirion, J., Candolfi, E., & Frugier, M. (2013). Aminoacylation of plasmodium falciparum trnaasn and insights in the synthesis of asparagine repeats. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 288(51), 36361–36371. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.522896
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