| Literature DB >> 30016987 |
Gabriela Arévalo-Pinzón1,2, María González-González3,4, Carlos Fernando Suárez1,5, Hernando Curtidor1,6, Javier Carabias-Sánchez3, Antonio Muro7, Joshua LaBaer8, Manuel Alfonso Patarroyo1,6, Manuel Fuentes9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Plasmodium vivax is the most widespread malarial species, causing significant morbidity worldwide. Knowledge is limited regarding the molecular mechanism of invasion due to the lack of a continuous in vitro culture system for these species. Since protein-protein and host-cell interactions play an essential role in the microorganism's invasion and replication, elucidating protein function during invasion is critical when developing more effective control methods. Nucleic acid programmable protein array (NAPPA) has thus become a suitable technology for studying protein-protein and host-protein interactions since producing proteins through the in vitro transcription/translation (IVTT) method overcomes most of the drawbacks encountered to date, such as heterologous protein production, stability and purification.Entities:
Keywords: IVTT protein expression; Malaria; NAPPA array; Plasmodium vivax; Protein–protein interaction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30016987 PMCID: PMC6050706 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-018-2414-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
P. vivax proteins selected for NAPPA array
| Annotation | Pv gene ID | Time transcriptiona | Localization | Proteome datac | Fragments | Regions expressed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target | ||||||
| Merozoite surface protein 1 ( | PVX_099980 | TP7 | Merozoite surface | X | 2 | 1350D-F1723; 761G-E1349 |
| Merozoite surface protein 4 ( | PVX_003775 | TP7 | 1 | 30I-S248 | ||
| Merozoite surface protein 8 ( | PVX_097625 | TP2 | X | 1 | 24G-Y462 | |
| Merozoite surface protein 10 ( | PVX_114145 | TP7 | 1 | 30L-A459 | ||
| 6-Cysteine protein 41 ( | PVX_000995 | TP7 | X | 1 | 19A-Q383 | |
| 6-Cysteine protein 12 ( | PVX_113775 | TP7 | X | 1 | 27T-G336 | |
| Asparagine rich protein ( | PVX_090210 | TP7 | X | 1 | 16C-V284 | |
| Thrombospondin-related protein ( | PVX_123575 | TP8 | Apical/merozoite surface | 1 | 24K-I300 | |
| Merozoite surface protein 5 ( | PVX_003770 | TP8 | Micronemes/apical | X | 1 | 22R-I362 |
| Apical merozoite antigen 1 ( | PVX_092275 | TP8 | X | 2 | 43P-E343; 43P-L487 | |
| Duffy binding protein 1 (DBP1) | PVX_110810 | ↓ transcriptionb | 3 | 26E-C217; 198T-D524; 521T-T1000 | ||
| Reticulocyte-binding protein 1a ( | PVX_098585 | TP8 | 4 | 582E-E1457; 1549F-G1758; 1880S-R2229; 2245S-E2832 | ||
| Rhoptry neck protein 1 ( | PVX_000945 | TP7 | Rhoptry neck protein | 1 | 25K-R772 | |
| Rhoptry neck protein 2 ( | PVX_117880 | TP7 | X | 2 | 735G-L1560 and 1554L-V2203 | |
| Rhoptry neck protein 5 ( | PVX_089530 | TP7 | X | 1 | 23F-W500 ( | |
| Rhoptry neck protein 4 ( | PVX_091434 | TP7 | 1 | 25F-I756 | ||
| Rhoptry-associated protein 1 ( | PVX_085930 | TP7 | Rhoptries | 1 | 2T-Y633 | |
| Rhoptry-associated protein 2 ( | PVX_097590 | TP7 | X | 1 | 22H-H382 | |
| High molecular weight rhoptry protein 3 ( | PVX_098712 | No data | 1 | 21Q-F599 | ||
| Rhoptry associated membrane antigen ( | PVX_087885 | TP7 | Rhoptry body protein | X | 1 | 21F-G710 |
| Prey | ||||||
| 6-Cysteine protein 12 ( | PVX_113775 | TP7 | Merozoite surface | X | 1 | 27T-G336 |
aTranscription data from time points (TP) 1–9 of 3 vivax malaria isolates [82]
bLow transcriptional levels in all time points measured (TP1–TP9) [82]
cData from proteomic analyses [51, 55]
Fig. 1Outline of NAPPA protocol for detecting PPI in P. vivax. Step 1. Cloning: 35 DNA fragments from 20 P. vivax genes were amplified, adding attB recombination sequences for each one. Entry vector (pDONR221) recombination involved using BP clonase. Step 2. Sub-cloning: a second recombination involved positive clones (pDONR-Pv gene) and destination vectors (pANT7-cGST or pJFT7-nHalo) using LR clonase. Step 3. Printing and quality control: P. vivax plasmids were mixed with BSA, a crosslinker and rabbit polyclonal anti-GST antibody, and printed in spots on aminosilane-coated glass slides. After blocking, PicoGreen dye or IVTT (RRL or HCIVT) were used for staining slides. PicoGreen readings were used to calculate intra- and inter-slide correlation for assessing DNA printing quality. IVTT involved detecting captured proteins using mouse monoclonal anti-GST (primary) and HRP-linked anti-mouse IgG (secondary) antibodies, using tyramide as activated substrate. The amount of positive and negative spots was used to estimate expression performance. Step 4. Prey/bait co-expression: The IVTT system (RLL) was added together with prey plasmid to the array containing bait plasmid. Step 5. PPI detection: The PPI were revealed using mouse anti-Halo monoclonal (primary) and HRP-linked anti-mouse IgG (secondary) antibodies, using tyramide as activated substrate. Step 6. Data analysis: Fluorescence values were normalized to estimate positive signal values (greater than 1) for DNA printing and protein expression
Fig. 2Analysing printed DNA reproducibility. a Analysis of expression library quality by enzymatic digestion. The BsrGI enzyme was used for digestion; two DNA fragments were produced. The 4 kbp band corresponds to the linearized vector, whilst the smaller fragment corresponds to the released insert. The presence of more than one band below 4 kbp indicate that the insert contains restriction sites for BsrGI. MWM: molecular weight marker. At least two fragments were observed in all cases. b Scanning images showing the spots (i.e. DNA printed onto cell surface before expression). The Figure shows 16 sub-arrays (containing 29 clones and negative controls) for each array. Each region is represented by two sub-arrays. c Inter-slide reproducibility showing the relationship between normalized PicoGreen signals for clones printed in different arrays. d Intra-slide reproducibility showing the relationship between clones printed on different sub-arrays
Fig. 3Analysing Plasmodium vivax protein expression using RRL or HCIVT in NAPPA arrays and Western blot. a Scanning images showing the spots for three sub-arrays for proteins expressed with the RRL system after incubation with anti-GST. b Comparing P. vivax antigen expression with rabbit reticulocyte lysate (RRL) and 1-step human coupled IVT (HCIVT). The relationship between normalized cDNA signal and normalized protein signal for each expression system is shown. Values greater than 1 were considered positive
Fig. 4NAPPA functional assessment of Plasmodium vivax proteins. a The Pv12 protein was used as query for evaluating its interaction with 29 P. vivax protein fragments displayed on the array and one P. falciparum protein (PfMSP183kDa). Query DNA encoding an N-terminal Halo tag was added to reticulocyte lysate for co-expression with bait proteins. The interaction signal was determined with anti-Halo antibodies. Normalized values are shown for 30 clones evaluated on the array. A median value > 1 was considered positive interaction. b Median value ± standard deviation of proteins interacting with Pv12