Authors
J Marsolier, M Perichon, JD DeBarry, BO Villoutreix, J Chluba, T Lopez, C Garrido, XZ Zhou, KP Lu, L Fritsch, S Ait-Si-Ali, M Mhadhbi, S Medjkane, JB Weitzman
Publication date
2015/4/16
Journal
Nature
Volume
520
Issue
7547
Pages
378-382
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Infectious agents develop intricate mechanisms to interact with host cell pathways and hijack their genetic and epigenetic machinery to change host cell phenotypic states. Among the Apicomplexa phylum of obligate intracellular parasites, which cause veterinary and human diseases, Theileria is the only genus that transforms its mammalian host cells. Theileria infection of bovine leukocytes induces proliferative and invasive phenotypes associated with activated signalling pathways, notably JNK and AP-1 (ref. ). The transformed phenotypes are reversed by treatment with the theilericidal drug buparvaquone. We used comparative genomics to identify a homologue of the peptidyl-prolyl isomerase PIN1 in T. annulata (TaPIN1) that is secreted into the host cell and modulates oncogenic signalling pathways. Here we show that TaPIN1 is a bona fide prolyl isomerase and that it interacts with the host ubiquitin ligase …
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