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Cathepsin F of Teladorsagia circumcincta is a recently evolved cysteine protease.

Sarah SloanCaitlin JenveyCallum CairnsMichael Stear
Published in: Evolutionary bioinformatics online (2020)
Parasitic cysteine proteases are involved in parasite stage transition, invasion of host tissues, nutrient uptake, and immune evasion. The cysteine protease cathepsin F is the most abundant protein produced by fourth-stage larvae (L4) of the nematode Teladorsagia circumcincta, while its transcript is only detectable in L4 and adults. T. circumcincta cathepsin F is a recently evolved cysteine protease that does not fall clearly into either of the cathepsin L or F subfamilies. This protein exhibits characteristics of both cathepsins F and L, and its phylogenetic relationship to its closest homologs is distant, including proteins of closely related nematodes of the same subfamily.
Keyphrases
  • fluorescent probe
  • living cells
  • protein protein
  • gene expression
  • lymph node
  • rna seq
  • small molecule
  • zika virus