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1.
Pekin ducklings were vaccinated with Freund's complete adjuvant plus free Plasmodium lophurae parasites, erythrocytes infected with P. lophurae schizonts, or parasite membrane vesicles. Approximately 50% of the vaccinated ducklings were resistant to challenge with this malarial parasite. However, little protection was afforded by immunization of ducklings with a parasite-specific histidine-rich protein.  相似文献   

2.
The surface membranes of erythrocyte-free Plasmodium lophurae and its host cell, the duckling erythrocyte, stain differentially when exposed to cationized ferritin (CF). At low CF concentrations (0.18 mg/ml) only the outer surface of the red cell stains, whereas at the standard concentration (0.7 mg/ml) both the red cell and the parasitophorous vacuolar membranes (PVM) were stained on their outer faces. By using a high CF concentration (3.7 mg/ml), the parasite's plasma membrane (PM) could be distinguished from that of the PVM: The former did not bind CF, whereas the latter was stained on its outer surface. At this level of CF the red cell membrane stained on both faces if these surfaces were exposed to stain. Although the PVM is formed by red cell endocytosis of the parasite, it can be distinguished from the membrane of the erythrocyte as well as that of the PM.  相似文献   

3.
SYNOPSIS. Plasma membranes of normal duckling erythrocytes were prepared by blender homogenization and nitrogen decompression. Surface membrane vesicles of red cells infected with the avian malaria Plasmodium lophurae were produced by nitrogen decompression. Membranes of erythrocyte-free malaria parasites were removed from cytoplasmic constituents by Dounce homogenization. These membranes were collected by centrifugation in a sucrose step gradient and purified on a linear sucrose gradient. Red cell membranes had a buoyant density of 1.159 g/cm3, whereas plasmodial membranes banded at 2 densities: 1.110 g/cm3 and 1.158 g/cm3. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the isolated red cell membranes revealed 7 major protein bands with molecular weights (MW) ranging from 230,000 to 22,000, and 3 glycoprotein bands with MW of 160,000, 88,000 and 37,000. Parasite membranes also had 7 major bands with MW ranging from 100,000 to 22,000. No glycoproteins were identifiable in these membranes. The proteins of the surface membranes from infected red cells had MW similar to those from normal red cells; however, there was some evidence of a reduction in the amount of the high MW polypeptides. The red cell membrane contained 79 nmoles sialic acid/mg membrane protein, whereas plasmodial membranes had 8 nmoles sialic acid/mg membrane protein. The sialic acid content of the surface membranes of infected red cells was significantly smaller than that of normal cells. Lactoperoxidase-glucose oxidase-catalyzed iodination of intact normal and malaria-infected erythrocytes labeled 7 surface components. Although no observable differences in iodinatable proteins were seen in these preparations, there was a striking reduction in the iodinatability of erythrocytic membranes obtained from P. lophurae-infected cells. Erythrocyte-free plasmodia bound very little radioactive iodine; the small amount of radioactivity was distributed among 3 major bands with MW of 42,000, 32,000 and 28,000. It is suggested that the alterations of the surface of the P. lophurae-infected erythrocyte do not occur by a wholesale insertion of plasmodial membrane proteins into the red cell plasma membrane, but rather that there are parasite-mediated modifications of existing membrane polypeptides.  相似文献   

4.
The majority (10 of 17) of amino acids tested entered the mature duck erythrocyte by a saturable, non-uphill transport system, whereas for the erythrocyte-free malarial parasite, Plasmodium lophurae, the converse was true: most amino acids entered the parasite by simple diffusion. Only five amino acids (glutamic and aspartic acids, cysteine, lysine, arginine) showed mediated entry into P. lophurae. The pattern of mediated amino acid transport into the duck erythrocyte was altered upon infection, e.g., either entry was by diffusion or there was a reduced affinity for the amino acid. Transport characteristics similar to those found in the malaria-infected erythrocyte were produced by treating normal duck red cells with a cell-free extract of malaria-infected erythrocytes and quinine (a depressor of red cell ATP). It is suggested that depletion of host cell ATP as well as elaboration of as yet unidentified substances by the parasite promote the changes in permeability seen in the malaria-infected cell.  相似文献   

5.
SYNOPSIS. The initial enzymatic reaction in the pathway of coenzyme A genesis from pantothenic acid, i.e., the conversion of pantothenic acid to phosphopantothenic acid catalyzed by pantothenic acid kinase, was found in extracts of avian erythrocytes but not in extracts of Plasmodium lophurae or intact parasites. The activity of the kinase was significantly higher in extracts prepared from normal duck erythrocytes than those infected with P. lophurae. The apparent absence of pantothenic acid kinase in P. lophurae is corroborative support for nutritional studies(7,9) which suggest that the avian malarial parasite is dependent for its supply of coenzyme A on the host cell.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The fine structure of erythrocytic stages of Plasmodium knowlesi was compared with that of the same parasite isolated from its host cell by a saponin technique. Rhesus monkeys experimentally infected with Plasmodium knowlesi were the source of parasitized red cells. The erythrocytic stages of this Plasmodium showed all the organelles described in other mammalian forms; the nucleus lacked a typical nucleolus but contained a cluster of granules. P. knowlesi did not have protozoan-type mitochondria as do the avian and reptilian forms, but had double-membrane-bounded bodies as observed in other mammalian malarial parasites.The isolation procedure caused a slight swelling of the parasite, but in general, the structure and structural relationships of the parasite were preserved. However, the isolation technique gave a new insight into the connection of the host cell cytoplasm with the large, so-called food vacuoles of the parasite. The parasite freed from its host cell showed clear spaces where the large vacuoles had been. The content of these vacuoles had been removed together with the red cell cytoplasm. As the nature of the isolation procedure precluded any disruption of the parasite itself, these findings support our view that the vacuoles are not true food vacuoles. If these were true food vacuoles, they would be completely enclosed by a parasite membrane within the parasite cytoplasm. However, we have demonstrated that they represent extensions of host cell cytoplasm in direct communication with the rest of the red cell. The outer membrane surrounding the intra-erythrocytic parasites disappeared after isolation of the parasite from the host cell. This strongly suggested that the outer membrane is of host cell origin. The budding process of the merozoites from a schizont was also described and discussed.This paper is contribution No. 558 from the Army Research Program on Malaria and was supported in part by Research Grant AI 08970-01 from the United States Public Health Service.  相似文献   

7.
Antibody induces mobility of surface antigens of live blood forms of Trypanosoma cruzi when these cells are incubated with human or animal antisera. Parasites of one strain (Y) showed aggregation of surface antigens to form an anterior or more frequently a posterior cap. The proportion of cap forming trypomastigotes increased with time and was dependent on temperature and amount of antiserum. Cap formation was inhibited by sodium azide or iodoacetamide. Crosslinking of surface antigens by antibodies causing agglutination of trypomastigotes decreased antigenic mobility and capping. Capping was not affected by treatment of the parasites with colchicine or cytochalasin B. Antigen mobility was not related to the presence of antibodies against parasite and host tissue cross-reacting antigens. Aggregation of surface membrane antigens was also observed in parasites which survive after immune lysis. Results of light and electron microscopic studies suggested that at least part of the aggregated antigens was eliminated from the trypomastigote's surface. Cap formation was strain and stage dependent. It was not observed when Y-strain epimastigotes were used and it occurred less frequently in CL than in Y-strain trypomastigotes.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Plasmodium lophurae-infected red blood cells utilized considerably greater quantities of glucose than did uninfected duckling red cells. Kinetic analysis of glucose transport showed: (A). Below a concentration of 2 mM in the medium the uptake process followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics (carrier-mediated facilitated diffusion) whereas at concentrations greater than this simple diffusion became the main mode of entry. (B). The apparent transport constants, Kt, for normal and infected cells were similar. However there was an 8-fold increase in the maximal velocity, Vmax, for infected cells. (C). “Free” malaria parasites had a significantly lower Kt and a higher Vmax than did normal or infected red cells. Entry and exit studies with the nonmetabolizable sugar analog, 3-0-methyl glucose, demonstrated that the enhanced rate of uptake by infected cells involved an increase in the simple diffusion component and the degree of enhancement was correlated with the size of the intracellular parasite. Competition experiments suggested that in the malaria-infected cell one locus is involved in the carrier-mediated transport of glucose, mannose and galactose whereas another locus transports fructose and/or glycerol. These results indicate that the enhanced entry of glucose into the malaria-infected red cell is a consequence of factors other than increased glucose catabolism by the host-parasite complex, and the host cell's capacity to take up greater quantities of sugar directly involves the growing intracellular plasmodium.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Dihydrofolate reductase activity in duckling erythrocytes was found to be low, while activity in erythrocytes heavily infected with small uninucleate trophozoites was like that of uninfected erythrocytes. Activity of the enzyme in erythrocytes infected with large multinucleate parasites, however, was greatly increased. This activity was 5 times higher in erythrocyte-free large trophozoites than in small ones. The dihydrofolate reductase of P. lophurae differed from the host enzyme in: greater molecular weight; higher sensitivity to pyrimethamine inhibition; pH optimum; substrate and cofactor specificity; and stimulation by salts. The parasite enzyme was partially purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation.  相似文献   

12.
FINE STRUCTURE OF THE ASEXUAL STAGES OF PLASMODIUM ELONGATUM   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Plasmodium elongatum, an avian malarial parasite, differs from other such parasites by infecting both the circulating red blood cells and the hematopoietic cells. The exoerythrocytic development of P. elongatum occurs mainly in these red cell precursors. The fine structure of the asexual stages of P. elongatum has been studied in the bone marrow and peripheral blood of canaries and compared with that of the asexual stages of other avian malarial parasites. With minor differences, the merozoites of P. elongatum possess the same organelles as those in the exoerythrocytic merozoites of P. fallax and the erythrocytic stages of P. cathemerium, P. lophurae, P. fallax, and P. gallinaceum. The developmental sequence is also essentially similar to that of other avian malarial parasites, in that upon entry into a new host cell, the dedifferentiation, growth, and redifferentiation phases take place. However, we have found some important differences in the feeding mechanism of P. elongatum. The cytostome is involved in the ingestion of host cell cytoplasm in both exoerythrocytic and erythrocytic stages, in contrast to P. fallax, in which the cytostome is inactive in the exoerythrocytic stages. In P. elongatum, host cell cytoplasm is ingested through the cytostome, and "boluses" are formed and incorporated into a large digestive vacuole. Subsequently, the digestion of the boluses takes place in this digestive vacuole. Thus, in regard to the function of the cytostome, the exoerythrocytic stages of P. elongatum appear to be closely related to the erythrocytic stage which has a feeding mechanism similar to that of the erythrocytic stage of other avian malarial parasites.  相似文献   

13.

Background

The invasion of red blood cells (RBCs) by malarial parasites is an essential step in the life cycle of Plasmodium falciparum. Human-parasite surface protein interactions play a critical role in this process. Although several interactions between human and parasite proteins have been discovered, the mechanism related to invasion remains poorly understood because numerous human-parasite protein interactions have not yet been identified. High-throughput screening experiments are not feasible for malarial parasites due to difficulty in expressing the parasite proteins. Here, we performed computational prediction of the PPIs involved in malaria parasite invasion to elucidate the mechanism by which invasion occurs.

Results

In this study, an expectation maximization algorithm was used to estimate the probabilities of domain-domain interactions (DDIs). Estimates of DDI probabilities were then used to infer PPI probabilities. We found that our prediction performance was better than that based on the information of D. melanogaster alone when information related to the six species was used. Prediction performance was assessed using protein interaction data from S. cerevisiae, indicating that the predicted results were reliable. We then used the estimates of DDI probabilities to infer interactions between 490 parasite and 3,787 human membrane proteins. A small-scale dataset was used to illustrate the usability of our method in predicting interactions between human and parasite proteins. The positive predictive value (PPV) was lower than that observed in S. cerevisiae. We integrated gene expression data to improve prediction accuracy and to reduce false positives. We identified 80 membrane proteins highly expressed in the schizont stage by fast Fourier transform method. Approximately 221 erythrocyte membrane proteins were identified using published mass spectral datasets. A network consisting of 205 interactions was predicted. Results of network analysis suggest that SNARE proteins of parasites and APP of humans may function in the invasion of RBCs by parasites.

Conclusions

We predicted a small-scale PPI network that may be involved in parasite invasion of RBCs by integrating DDI information and expression profiles. Experimental studies should be conducted to validate the predicted interactions. The predicted PPIs help elucidate the mechanism of parasite invasion and provide directions for future experimental investigations.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12859-014-0393-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

14.
In Plasmodium, the membrane of intracellular parasites is initially formed during invasion as an invagination of the red blood cell surface, which forms a barrier between the parasite and infected red blood cells in asexual blood stage parasites. The membrane proteins of intracellular parasites of Plasmodium species have been identified such as early-transcribed membrane proteins (ETRAMPs) and exported proteins (EXPs). However, there is little or no information regarding the intracellular parasite membrane in Plasmodium vivax. In the present study, recombinant PvETRAMP11.2 (PVX_003565) and PvEXP1 (PVX_091700) were expressed and evaluated antigenicity tests using sera from P. vivax-infected patients. A large proportion of infected individuals presented with IgG antibody responses against PvETRAMP11.2 (76.8%) and PvEXP1 (69.6%). Both of the recombinant proteins elicited high antibody titers capable of recognizing parasites of vivax malaria patients. PvETRAMP11.2 partially co-localized with PvEXP1 on the intracellular membranes of immature schizont. Moreover, they were also detected at the apical organelles of newly formed merozoites of mature schizont. We first proposed that these proteins might be synthesized in the preceding schizont stage, localized on the parasite membranes and apical organelles of infected erythrocytes, and induced high IgG antibody responses in patients.  相似文献   

15.
Purine utilization in the malarial parasite dependent on a “salvage” pathway was studied to determine the detailed mechanism of how purines were utilized and which precursor might be penetrating the membrane of the parasite.Erythrocyte-free malarial parasites (Plasmodium berghei) were incubated at 20 C with 2,8-3H-adenosine as a precursor for purine metabolism. Parasites and medium were separated using a unique system whereby the metabolites associated with the parasite and those contained in the medium can be identified after as little as 15 sec–10 min of incubation. It was shown that 3H-adenosine is rapidly deaminated to inosine and then deribosylated to hypoxanthine. The distribution of radioactivity indicated that these events occurred on the surface or outside of the parasite, while conversion of hypoxanthine to form IMP, and subsequently to ATP occurred most probably inside the parasite. The results indicated that hypoxanthine may be the immediate precursor entering the parasite membrane and is then converted to IMP eventually forming AMP, ADP, and ATP. 3H-IMP occurred in high concentration with a maximum occurring 2 min after incubation and gradually decreasing thereafter. The pool sizes of AMP and ADP appeared to be small and were quickly saturated. Formation of 3H-ATP continued to increase throughout the 10 min experimental period at which time > 80% of the added adenosine was converted to ATP. The large pool of IMP appeared to act as a “sink” to accomodate large amounts of purine intermediates available for later use and this could be a mechanism developed by the parasites to bypass the usual regulatory control of AMP.Phosphorylation and further utilization of 3H adenosine was completely eliminated in the presence of 5 × 10?5M concentrations of adenosine, inosine, and hypoxanthine. Hypoxanthine, a normal-exit metabolite in mammalian purine metabolism, is apparently the building block of the nucleotides for the parasite indicating that hypoxanthine and/or its analogs may be able to antagonize and therefore have chemotherapeutic value in the treatment of malaria.Scanning-beam electron microscopy of the parasites showed that the free malarial parasites were round in shape measuring 1–2 μm (average 1.5 μm) in diameter and the outer surface appeared to be somewhat uneven.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Recent findings of Plasmodium in African apes have changed our perspectives on the evolution of malarial parasites in hominids. However, phylogenetic analyses of primate malarias are still missing information from Southeast Asian apes. In this study, we report molecular data for a malaria parasite lineage found in orangutans.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We screened twenty-four blood samples from Pongo pygmaeus (Kalimantan, Indonesia) for Plasmodium parasites by PCR. For all the malaria positive orangutan samples, parasite mitochondrial genomes (mtDNA) and two antigens: merozoite surface protein 1 42 kDa (MSP-142) and circumsporozoite protein gene (CSP) were amplified, cloned, and sequenced. Fifteen orangutans tested positive and yielded 5 distinct mitochondrial haplotypes not previously found. The haplotypes detected exhibited low genetic divergence among them, indicating that they belong to one species. We report phylogenetic analyses using mitochondrial genomes, MSP-142 and CSP. We found that the orangutan malaria parasite lineage was part of a monophyletic group that includes all the known non-human primate malaria parasites found in Southeast Asia; specifically, it shares a recent common ancestor with P. inui (a macaque parasite) and P. hylobati (a gibbon parasite) suggesting that this lineage originated as a result of a host switch. The genetic diversity of MSP-142 in orangutans seems to be under negative selection. This result is similar to previous findings in non-human primate malarias closely related to P. vivax. As has been previously observed in the other Plasmodium species found in non-human primates, the CSP shows high polymorphism in the number of repeats. However, it has clearly distinctive motifs from those previously found in other malarial parasites.

Conclusion

The evidence available from Asian apes indicates that these parasites originated independently from those found in Africa, likely as the result of host switches from other non-human primates.  相似文献   

17.
Biochemistry of red cell invasion   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
R J Wilson 《Blood cells》1990,16(2-3):237-52; discussion 253-6
We are still far from an explicit understanding of the events that characterize the invasion of red cells by malarial parasites at the structural and biochemical levels. The nature of the interaction between the attached parasite and the host cell; the origin of the parasitophorous vacuole; the identity, disposition, and arrangement of the propulsive proteins of the parasite; the functions of the rhoptry organelles; and the rearrangement of the host cell membrane to permit entry of the parasite remain to be elucidated. A hypothetical scheme is presented that pursues the processes involved in invasion from the biochemical events generated by attachment of the parasite, to the steric rearrangement of red cell membrane proteins, which culminates in invasion.  相似文献   

18.
Plasmodium falciparum is the most virulent causative agent of malaria in man accounting for 80% of all malarial infections and 90% of the one million annual deaths attributed to malaria. P. falciparum is a unicellular, Apicomplexan parasite, that spends part of its lifecycle in the mosquito and part in man and it has evolved a special form of motility that enables it to burrow into animal cells, a process termed “host cell invasion”. The acute, life threatening, phase of malarial infection arises when the merozoite form of the parasite undergoes multiple cycles of red blood cell invasion and rapid proliferation. Here, we discuss the molecular machinery that enables malarial parasites to invade red blood cells and we focus particularly on the ATP-driven acto-myosin motor that powers invasion.  相似文献   

19.
SYNOPSIS. Although large hemoglobin inclusions are observed in intraerythrocytic Babesia microti parasites, they are absent from parasites freed of hamster red cells by immune lysis with antihamster erythsocyte serum. Babesia microti has no cytostome. This parasite, therefore, does not appear to feed by phagocytosis of large boluses of hemoglobin, as does Plasmodium. To determine whether Babesia can pinocytose protein, free parasites were fed ferritin in an in vitro system. Ferritin was taken up from the entire cell surface into narrow channels within 15 min at 37 C. Only merozoites, with their pellicular complex, failed to take up the protein. By 60 min, the ferritin was highly concentrated in many channels and vesicles, which formed interconnecting stacks. The ferritin-containing channels became associated with membrane whorls of the multimembranous structure. Membrane whorls were also observed in the process of extrusion in samples incubated for longer times. These events may represent steps in the digestion and excretion of the pinocytosed protein. Empty channels formed when Babesia was fed albumin. The diaminobenzidine reaction for hemoprotein was positive for the channels in both free and intraerythrocytic babesias. The staining reaction was completely inhibited by cyanide, but not at all by aminotriazole. These results further suggest that Babesia pinocytoses hemoglobin in vivo. Plasmodium lophurae parasites freed of red cells by immune lysis are surrounded by 2 membranes and apparently can ingest ferritin only through the cytostome. Extracellular cytostomal feeding involves both membranes, as it does in vivo. Ferritin was found in food vacuoles, some of which contained hemoglobin ingested before parasite isolation, connected to or near the cytostome. In both Plasmodium and Babesia low temperature inhibited ferritin uptake.  相似文献   

20.
Antigenic analysis of sequential erythrocytic stages of Plasmodium knowlesi.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
The antigenic composition of sequential erythrocytic stages of Plasmodium knowlesi has been compared by crossed immuno-electrophoresis using a pool of immune rhesus monkey antiserum. Eleven major parasite antigens have been identified; 9 are stage-independent, and 2 stage-dependent. Differences in the relative amount of the stage-independent antigens have been demonstrated and quantified. The distribution of antigens between parasites and schizont and infected red cell membranes has been examined. Only 6 of the 11 parasite antigens were exhibited by a schizont membrane preparation, all these antigens were also expressed by the intracellular parasite. Antigens exclusive to the schizont membrane were not demonstrated.  相似文献   

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