Abstract
The cytosolic T-complex protein-1 ring complex (TRiC), also referred as chaperonin containing TCP-1(CCT), comprising eight different subunits stacked in double toroidal rings, binds to around 10 % of newly synthesized polypeptides and facilitates their folding in ATP dependent manner. In Leishmania, among five subunits of TCP1 complex, identified either by transcriptome or by proteome analysis, only LdTCP1γ has been well characterized. It forms biologically active homo-oligomeric complex and plays role in protein folding and parasite survival. Lack of information regarding rest of the TCP1 subunits and its structural configuration laid down the necessity to study individual subunits and their role in parasite pathogenicity. The present study involves the cloning, expression and biochemical characterization of TCP1ε subunit (LdTCP1ε) of Leishmania donovani, the causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis. LdTCP1ε exhibited significant difference in primary structure as compared to LdTCP1γ and was evolutionary close to LdTCP1 zeta subunit. Recombinant protein (rLdTCP1ε) exhibited two major bands of 132 kDa and 240 kDa on native-PAGE that corresponds to the dimeric and tetrameric assembly of the epsilon subunit, which showed the chaperonin activity (ATPase and luciferase refolding activity). LdTCP1ε also displayed an increased expression upto 2.7- and 1.8-fold in the late log phase and stationary phase promastigotes and exhibited majorly vesicular localization. The study, thus for the first time, provides an insight for the presence of highly diverge but functionally active dimeric/tetrameric TCP1 epsilon subunit in Leishmania parasite.
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