The repertoire of serine rhomboid proteases of piroplasmids of importance to animal and human health

Babesia, Theileria and Cytauxzoon are tick-borne apicomplexan protozoans of the order Piroplasmida, notorious for the diseases they cause in livestock, pets and humans. Host cell invasion is their Achilles heel, allowing for the development of drug or vaccine-based therapies. In other apicomplexans, cleavage of the transmembrane domain of adhesins by the serine rhomboid proteinase ROM4 is required for successful completion of invasion. In this study, we record and classify the rhomboid repertoire encoded in the genomes of 10 piroplasmid species pertaining to the lineages Babesia sensu stricto (s.s., Clade VI), Theileria sensu stricto (Clade IV), Theileria equi (Clade IV), Cytauxzoon felis (Clade IIIb) and Babesia microti (Clade I), as defined by Schnittger et al. (2012). Fifty-six piroplasmid rhomboid-like proteins were assigned by phylogenetic analysis and bidirectional best hit to the ROM4, ROM6, ROM7 or ROM8 groups, and their crucial motifs for conformation and function were identified. Forty-four of these rhomboids had either been incorrectly classified or misannotated. Babesia s.s. encode five or three ROM4 proteinase paralogs, whereas the remaining piroplasmids encode two ROM4 paralogs. All piroplasmids encode a single ROM6, ROM7 and ROM8. Thus, an increased paralog number of ROM4 is the only feature distinguishing Babesia s.s. from other piroplasmid lineages. Piroplasmid ROM6 is related to the mammalian mitochondrial rhomboid and, accordingly, N-terminal mitochondrial targeting signal sequences was found in some cases. ROM6 is the only rhomboid encoded by piroplasmids that is ubiquitous in other organisms. ROM8 represents a pseudoproteinase that is highly conserved between studied piroplasmids, suggesting that it is important in regulatory functions. ROM4, ROM6, ROM7 and ROM8 are exclusively present in Aconoidasida, which comprises piroplasmids and Plasmodium, suggesting a relevant functional role in erythrocyte invasion. The correct classification and designation of piroplasmid rhomboids presented in this study facilitates an informed choice for future in-depth study of their functions.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gallenti, Romina Josefina, Poklepovich Caride, Tomás Javier, Florin-Christensen, Monica, Schnittger, Leonhard
Format: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Elsevier 2022-04-26T10:43:00Z
Subjects:Proteinases, Phylogenetic Analysis, Piroplasmea, Serine, Animal Health, Proteinasas, Análisis Filogenético, Babesia, Piroplásmea, Theileria, Cytauxzoon, Serina, Sanidad Animal, Piroplasmids, Tick-transmitted Pathogens, Human Health, Piroplásmidos, Patógenos transmitidos por Garrapatas, Salud Humana,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/11731
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0020751921000540
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.10.010
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