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Protein Domain : IPR008118

Description  Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular apicomplexan protozoan parasite, with a complex lifestyle involving varied hosts [ ]. It has two phases of growth: an intestinal phase in feline hosts, and an extra-intestinal phase in other mammals. Oocysts from infected cats develop into tachyzoites, and eventually, bradyzoites and zoitocysts in the extraintestinal host []. Transmission of the parasite occurs through contact with infected cats or raw/undercooked meat; in immunocompromised individuals, it can cause severe and often lethal toxoplasmosis. Acute infection in healthy humans can sometimes also cause tissue damage [].The protozoan utilises a variety of secretory and antigenic proteins to invade a host and gain access to the intracellular environment [ ]. These originate from distinct organelles in the T. gondii cell termed micronemes, rhoptries, and dense granules. They are released at specific times during invasion to ensure the proteins are allocated to their correct target destinations []. Dense granule antigens (GRAs) are released from the T. gondii tachyzoite while still encapsulated in a host vacuole.Gra2, one of these moieties, is rapidly targeted to a network of membranous tubules that connect with the vacuolar membrane [ ]. A recent study into the exact mechanism of Gra2 secretion has revealed that the secondary structure of the protein plays a major role in its targeting and release from the apical pole of the parasitic cell []. Two amphipathic α-helical regions ensure not only that association of Gra2 with the host vacuole membrane takes place, but also that it is correctly targeted to the cell posterior, where stabilising networks of tubules form and hold the cell steady in the vacuole. Name  Dense granule Gra2 protein
Short Name  Gra2_protein Type  Family
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3 Publications

Genomics

2 Cross References

 

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1 Data Sets

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