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Plasmodium helical interspersed subtelomeric protein

The Plasmodium helical interspersed subtelomeric proteins (PHIST) or ring-infected erythrocyte surface antigens (RESA) are a family of protein domains found in the malaria-causing Plasmodium species. It was initially identified as a short four-helical conserved region in the single-domain export proteins, but the identification of this part associated with a DnaJ domain in P. falciparum RESA has led to its reclassification as the RESA N-terminal domain. This domain has been classified into three subfamilies, PHISTa, PHISTb, and PHISTc.

RESA
The full RESA protein in P. falciparum also contains a few other domains, namely the DnaJ domain and the DnaJ-associated X domain. A part of the X-domain, RESA/P13830663-670, appears to bind and reinforce spectrin cytoskeleton so that each erythrocyte only hosts one parasite. P. falciparum isolate 3D7 encodes three RESA-family proteins, RESA-1 (P13830//PF3D7_0102200), RESA-2 (M91672.1//PF3D7_1149500), RESA-3 (/PF3D7_1149200). RESA-2 is usually considered a transcribed pseudogene due to a premature stop codon. However, a missense mutation T1526G or T1526C in RESA-2 that removes this stop codon is commly found. It is associated with increased severity of disease. == Notes ==
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