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Mol. Cells 2007; 24(2): 294-300

Published online January 1, 1970

© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology

Functional Analysis of the First Mannosyltransferase (PIG-M) involved in Glycosylphosphatidylinositol Synthesis in Plasmodium falciparum

Youn Uck Kim and Yeongjin Hong

Abstract

The mammalian glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor consists of three mannoses attached to acylated GlcN-(acyl)PI to form Man3-GlcN-(acyl)PI. The first of the three mannose groups is attached to an intermediate to generate Man-GlcN-(acyl)PI by the first mannosyltransferase (GPI-MT-I). Mammalian and protozoan GPI-MT-I have different substrate specificities. PIG-M encodes the mammalial GPI-MT-I which has 423 amino acids and multiple transmembrane domains. In this work we cloned PIG-M homologues from humans, Plasmodium falciparum (PfPIG-M), and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (GPI14), to test whether they could complement GPI-MT-I-deficient mammalian cells, since this biosynthetic step is likely to be a good target for selective screening of inhibitors against many pathogenic organisms. PfPIG-M partially restored cell surface expression of the GPI-anchored protein CD59 in PIG-M deficient mammalian cells, and first mannose transfer activity in vitro; however, this was not the case for GPI14.

Keywords GPI; GPI-MT-I; PIG-M; Plasmodium falciparum; Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Article

Communication

Mol. Cells 2007; 24(2): 294-300

Published online October 31, 2007

Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.

Functional Analysis of the First Mannosyltransferase (PIG-M) involved in Glycosylphosphatidylinositol Synthesis in Plasmodium falciparum

Youn Uck Kim and Yeongjin Hong

Abstract

The mammalian glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor consists of three mannoses attached to acylated GlcN-(acyl)PI to form Man3-GlcN-(acyl)PI. The first of the three mannose groups is attached to an intermediate to generate Man-GlcN-(acyl)PI by the first mannosyltransferase (GPI-MT-I). Mammalian and protozoan GPI-MT-I have different substrate specificities. PIG-M encodes the mammalial GPI-MT-I which has 423 amino acids and multiple transmembrane domains. In this work we cloned PIG-M homologues from humans, Plasmodium falciparum (PfPIG-M), and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (GPI14), to test whether they could complement GPI-MT-I-deficient mammalian cells, since this biosynthetic step is likely to be a good target for selective screening of inhibitors against many pathogenic organisms. PfPIG-M partially restored cell surface expression of the GPI-anchored protein CD59 in PIG-M deficient mammalian cells, and first mannose transfer activity in vitro; however, this was not the case for GPI14.

Keywords: GPI, GPI-MT-I, PIG-M, Plasmodium falciparum, Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Mol. Cells
Dec 31, 2023 Vol.46 No.12, pp. 727~777
COVER PICTURE
Lee et al. (pp. 757-763), show that disruption of ANKS1A promotes the entry of intraflagellar transport trains into cilia, increasing protein transport and forming extracellular vesicles (ECVs). This figure illustrates the abundance of ECVs along the cilia of primary ependymal cells derived from ANKS1A KO mice.

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