A zinc finger gene from Onchocerca volvulus encodes a protein with a functional signal peptide and an unusual Ser-His finger motif.
الكلمات الدالة
نبذة مختصرة
The filarial parasite Onchocerca volvulus is the causative agent of river blindness. In order to identify genes potentially involved in parasite development we cloned a zinc finger-encoding gene from this species. The ovzf-1 gene represents one member of a family of related zinc finger genes. The predicted ovzf-1 translation product of 447 amino acids includes a hydrophobic signal peptide, which is followed by 13 contiguous finger motifs. The domains of fingers II-XIII display several conserved amino acids and a typical Krüppel-like Cys2-His2 motif. The first finger domain has the two conserved Cys residues replaced with Ser residues; however, it includes all additional amino acids typical of zinc finger domains. The N-terminal domain functions as a signal peptide, as it directs secretion of a reporter protein and a truncated Ovzf protein. Expression of an Ovzf protein via the secretory pathway was also confirmed by demonstrating attachment of N-linked carbohydrates to the recombinant protein. Although the recombinant Ovzf protein also includes a signal peptide, immunofluorescence analyses localize it inside a specific compartment of the infected insect cell. Expression of ovzf mRNA is developmentally regulated; no specific transcript is detected in adult female worms but in the infective L3. Identification of a secreted protein that might function in modulating gene expression of host cells provides an interesting tool for the study of parasite-host interaction on a biochemical and molecular level.