On 2016 Mar 08, Nicholas Malmquist commented:
Thank you Dr. Soldati-Favre for your comments and highlighting the work of Dr. Ke Hu. In Chen PB, 2016 we openly discuss the possibility that PfSET7 is not necessarily a histone methyltransferase. We also provide examples from the literature of histone methyltransferase enzymes that are present in the cytosol in other organisms. After reporting PfSET7 as an active methyltransferase enzyme using histones as protein substrates, similar to the TgAKMT activity assays performed in Heaslip AT, 2011 and Sivagurunathan S, 2013, we invite our colleagues in the community, including those with an interest in parasite motility, to join us in the further exploration of the cellular function of PfSET7. Indeed, based solely on the phylogenetic analysis in Sivagurunathan S, 2013, investigating the role of PfSET7 in motility might prove fruitful. For additional information, the nomenclature "PfSET7" comes from Cui L, 2008 and is apparently unrelated to the SET7 family in Figure 1A of Sivagurunathan S, 2013.
This comment, imported by Hypothesis from PubMed Commons, is licensed under CC BY.