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Transcriptional regulation in Plasmodium falciparum: characterisation of TBP-like protein

Malaria persists as a devastating disease resulting in a high burden of morbidity and mortality worldwide. The most severe form of malaria is due to infection with Plasmodium falciparum, accounting for the overwhelming majority of malaria deaths. Despite extensive efforts to curb transmission, recen...

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Main Author: Michowicz, Joanna
Other Authors: Oelgeschlger, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Molecular and Cell Biology 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Michowicz, Joanna
author2 Oelgeschlger, Thomas
author_browse Michowicz, Joanna
Oelgeschlger, Thomas
author_facet Oelgeschlger, Thomas
Michowicz, Joanna
author_sort Michowicz, Joanna
collection Thesis
description Malaria persists as a devastating disease resulting in a high burden of morbidity and mortality worldwide. The most severe form of malaria is due to infection with Plasmodium falciparum, accounting for the overwhelming majority of malaria deaths. Despite extensive efforts to curb transmission, recent reports of drug resistance to front-line antimalarial treatments coupled with the continuing lack of effective vaccines implores the production of novel anti-malarials. Both parasite development and pathogenicity are tightly controlled by a highly regulated gene expression program. However, regulation at the level of transcription initiation is hitherto poorly understood. The TATA-binding protein (TBP) is a universal transcription factor required for transcription by RNA polymerase I, II and III. Multiple gene duplication events throughout eukaryotic evolution have resulted in many eukaryotes harbouring more than one TBP family protein. In metazoans, TBP paralogs have been shown to play important roles in cell-specific developmental gene expression programs. However, research into the roles of TBP paralogs in unicellular eukaryotes is extremely limited. Bioinformatic analyses have identified a P. falciparum putative TBP-like protein (PfTLP). Previous research in our laboratory demonstrated that PfTLP has DNA-binding activity and that it harbours two insertions, which are predicted intrinsically disordered regions (IDR1, IDR2), within its structurally conserved TBP DNA-binding domain. In recent years there has been mounting evidence that IDRs mediate liquid-liquid phase separation, a process which has transformed our understanding of cellular organisation and regulation of key cellular processes. The functional relevance of these IDRs is unknown. Therefore, to elucidate their role, this study was divided into three parts: (i) a bioinformatic analysis to investigate the prevalence of disordered regions within Apicomplexan TLPs, (ii) an investigation into the role of these regions in PfTLP DNA binding and (iii) an in-depth characterisation of phase separation by PfTLP IDRs and full-length PfTLP. This study highlights the prevalence of TLPs within Apicomplexa and, moreover, the presence of a conserved IDR2 in diverse Apicomplexan species. Both IDR1 and IDR2 were shown to bind to DNA and analysis of a panel of newly generated PfTLP deletion mutant protein constructs revealed that this DNA-binding activity stabilises PfTLP-DNA complexes. Finally, a systematic characterisation of the phase-separating properties of PfTLP IDRs and full-length PfTLP was carried out, using PfRBP1-CTD and PfTBP-IDR for comparison. It was found that PfTLP-IDR1 readily undergoes liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) at low protein concentrations, forming dynamic condensates that homogenously mix with dsDNA. In contrast, PfTLP-IDR2 does not self-assemble in the absence of phase-separating interaction partners. Interestingly, at a physiological protein concentration, full-length PfTLP was found to form clustered assemblies in isolation but formed separate, mixed condensates in the presence of dsDNA, suggesting a role of DNA in the regulation of PfTLP condensate formation. In addition, the interaction of PfTLP with DNA condensates was found to be independent of IDR1 and IDR2, consistent with the DNA-binding activity of the PfTLP structured domain. Thus, this study yields novel insights into the DNA-binding and phase-separating properties of PfTLP that may contribute to the assembly of the RNA polymerase II transcription initiation machinery of this divergent parasite.
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language English
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42429 Transcriptional regulation in Plasmodium falciparum: characterisation of TBP-like protein Michowicz, Joanna Oelgeschlger, Thomas malaria TBP-like protein Malaria persists as a devastating disease resulting in a high burden of morbidity and mortality worldwide. The most severe form of malaria is due to infection with Plasmodium falciparum, accounting for the overwhelming majority of malaria deaths. Despite extensive efforts to curb transmission, recent reports of drug resistance to front-line antimalarial treatments coupled with the continuing lack of effective vaccines implores the production of novel anti-malarials. Both parasite development and pathogenicity are tightly controlled by a highly regulated gene expression program. However, regulation at the level of transcription initiation is hitherto poorly understood. The TATA-binding protein (TBP) is a universal transcription factor required for transcription by RNA polymerase I, II and III. Multiple gene duplication events throughout eukaryotic evolution have resulted in many eukaryotes harbouring more than one TBP family protein. In metazoans, TBP paralogs have been shown to play important roles in cell-specific developmental gene expression programs. However, research into the roles of TBP paralogs in unicellular eukaryotes is extremely limited. Bioinformatic analyses have identified a P. falciparum putative TBP-like protein (PfTLP). Previous research in our laboratory demonstrated that PfTLP has DNA-binding activity and that it harbours two insertions, which are predicted intrinsically disordered regions (IDR1, IDR2), within its structurally conserved TBP DNA-binding domain. In recent years there has been mounting evidence that IDRs mediate liquid-liquid phase separation, a process which has transformed our understanding of cellular organisation and regulation of key cellular processes. The functional relevance of these IDRs is unknown. Therefore, to elucidate their role, this study was divided into three parts: (i) a bioinformatic analysis to investigate the prevalence of disordered regions within Apicomplexan TLPs, (ii) an investigation into the role of these regions in PfTLP DNA binding and (iii) an in-depth characterisation of phase separation by PfTLP IDRs and full-length PfTLP. This study highlights the prevalence of TLPs within Apicomplexa and, moreover, the presence of a conserved IDR2 in diverse Apicomplexan species. Both IDR1 and IDR2 were shown to bind to DNA and analysis of a panel of newly generated PfTLP deletion mutant protein constructs revealed that this DNA-binding activity stabilises PfTLP-DNA complexes. Finally, a systematic characterisation of the phase-separating properties of PfTLP IDRs and full-length PfTLP was carried out, using PfRBP1-CTD and PfTBP-IDR for comparison. It was found that PfTLP-IDR1 readily undergoes liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) at low protein concentrations, forming dynamic condensates that homogenously mix with dsDNA. In contrast, PfTLP-IDR2 does not self-assemble in the absence of phase-separating interaction partners. Interestingly, at a physiological protein concentration, full-length PfTLP was found to form clustered assemblies in isolation but formed separate, mixed condensates in the presence of dsDNA, suggesting a role of DNA in the regulation of PfTLP condensate formation. In addition, the interaction of PfTLP with DNA condensates was found to be independent of IDR1 and IDR2, consistent with the DNA-binding activity of the PfTLP structured domain. Thus, this study yields novel insights into the DNA-binding and phase-separating properties of PfTLP that may contribute to the assembly of the RNA polymerase II transcription initiation machinery of this divergent parasite. 2025-12-11T09:24:48Z 2025-12-11T09:24:48Z 2025 2025-12-11T09:17:04Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42429 en eng application/pdf Department of Molecular and Cell Biology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle malaria
TBP-like protein
Michowicz, Joanna
Transcriptional regulation in Plasmodium falciparum: characterisation of TBP-like protein
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Transcriptional regulation in Plasmodium falciparum: characterisation of TBP-like protein
title_full Transcriptional regulation in Plasmodium falciparum: characterisation of TBP-like protein
title_fullStr Transcriptional regulation in Plasmodium falciparum: characterisation of TBP-like protein
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptional regulation in Plasmodium falciparum: characterisation of TBP-like protein
title_short Transcriptional regulation in Plasmodium falciparum: characterisation of TBP-like protein
title_sort transcriptional regulation in plasmodium falciparum characterisation of tbp like protein
topic malaria
TBP-like protein
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42429
work_keys_str_mv AT michowiczjoanna transcriptionalregulationinplasmodiumfalciparumcharacterisationoftbplikeprotein