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1.
An actomyosin motor complex assembled below the parasite's plasma membrane drives erythrocyte invasion by Plasmodium falciparum merozoites. The complex is comprised of several proteins including myosin (MyoA), myosin tail domain interacting protein (MTIP) and glideosome associated proteins (GAP) 45 and 50, and is anchored on the inner membrane complex (IMC), which underlies the plasmalemma. A ternary complex of MyoA, MTIP and GAP45 is formed that then associates with GAP50. We show that full length GAP45 labelled internally with GFP is assembled into the motor complex and transported to the developing IMC in early schizogony, where it accumulates during intracellular development until merozoite release. We show that GAP45 is phosphorylated by calcium dependent protein kinase 1 (CDPK1), and identify the modified serine residues. Replacing these serine residues with alanine or aspartate has no apparent effect on GAP45 assembly into the motor protein complex or its subcellular location in the parasite. The early assembly of the motor complex suggests that it has functions in addition to its role in erythrocyte invasion.  相似文献   

2.
Functional dissection of the apicomplexan glideosome molecular architecture   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The glideosome of apicomplexan parasites is an actin- and myosin-based machine located at the pellicle, between the plasma membrane (PM) and inner membrane complex (IMC), that powers parasite motility, migration, and host cell invasion and egress. It is composed of myosin A, its light chain MLC1, and two gliding-associated proteins, GAP50 and GAP45. We identify GAP40, a polytopic protein of the IMC, as an additional glideosome component and show that GAP45 is anchored to the PM and IMC via its N- and C-terminal extremities, respectively. While the C-terminal region of GAP45 recruits MLC1-MyoA to the IMC, the N-terminal acylation and coiled-coil domain preserve pellicle integrity during invasion. GAP45 is essential for gliding, invasion, and egress. The orthologous Plasmodium falciparum GAP45 can fulfill this dual function, as shown by transgenera complementation, whereas the coccidian GAP45 homolog (designated here as) GAP70 specifically recruits the glideosome to the apical cap of the parasite.  相似文献   

3.
The inner membrane complex (IMC) of apicomplexan parasites is a specialised structure localised beneath the parasite’s plasma membrane, and is important for parasite stability and intracellular replication. Furthermore, it serves as an anchor for the myosin A motor complex, termed the glideosome. While the role of this protein complex in parasite motility and host cell invasion has been well described, additional roles during the asexual life cycle are unknown. Here, we demonstrate that core elements of the glideosome, the gliding associated proteins GAP40 and GAP50 as well as members of the GAPM family, have critical roles in the biogenesis of the IMC during intracellular replication. Deletion or disruption of these genes resulted in the rapid collapse of developing parasites after initiation of the cell cycle and led to redistribution of other glideosome components.  相似文献   

4.
The actomyosin motor complex of the glideosome provides the force needed by apicomplexan parasites such as Toxoplasma gondii (Tg) and Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) to invade their host cells and for gliding motility of their motile forms. Glideosome Associated Protein 45 (PfGAP45) is an essential component of the glideosome complex as it facilitates anchoring and effective functioning of the motor. Dissection of events that regulate PfGAP45 may provide insights into how the motor and the glideosome operate. We found that PfGAP45 is phosphorylated in response to Phospholipase C (PLC) and calcium signaling. It is phosphorylated by P. falciparum kinases Protein Kinase B (PfPKB) and Calcium Dependent Protein Kinase 1 (PfCDPK1), which are calcium dependent enzymes, at S89, S103 and S149. The Phospholipase C pathway influenced the phosphorylation of S103 and S149. The phosphorylation of PfGAP45 at these sites is differentially regulated during parasite development. The localization of PfGAP45 and its association may be independent of the phosphorylation of these sites. PfGAP45 regulation in response to calcium fits in well with the previously described role of calcium in host cell invasion by malaria parasite.  相似文献   

5.
Membrane skeletons are cytoskeletal elements that have important roles in cell development, shape, and structural integrity. Malaria parasites encode a conserved family of putative membrane skeleton proteins related to articulins. One member, IMC1a, is expressed in sporozoites and localizes to the pellicle, a unique membrane complex believed to form a scaffold onto which the ligands and glideosome are arranged to mediate parasite motility and invasion. IMC1b is a closely related structural paralogue of IMC1a, fostering speculation that it could be functionally homologous but in a different invasive life stage. Here we have generated genetically modified parasites that express IMC1b tagged with green fluorescent protein, and we show that it is targeted exclusively to the pellicle of ookinetes. We also show that IMC1b-deficient ookinetes display abnormal cell shape, reduced gliding motility, decreased mechanical strength, and reduced infectivity. These findings are consistent with a membrane skeletal role of IMC1b and provide strong experimental support for the view that membrane skeletons form an integral part of the pellicle of apicomplexan zoites and function to provide rigidity to the pellicular membrane complex. The similarities observed between the loss-of-function phenotypes of IMC1a and IMC1b show that membrane skeletons of ookinetes and sporozoites function in an overall similar way. However, the fact that ookinetes and sporozoites do not use the same IMC1 protein implies that different mechanical properties are required of their respective membrane skeletons, likely reflecting the distinct environments in which these life stages must operate.  相似文献   

6.
Apicomplexa possess a complex pellicle that is composed of a plasma membrane and a closely apposed inner membrane complex (IMC) that serves as a support for the actin‐myosin motor required for motility and host cell invasion. The IMC consists of longitudinal plates of flattened vesicles, fused together and lined on the cytoplasmic side by a subpellicular network of intermediate filament‐like proteins. The spatial organization of the IMC has been well described by electron microscopy, but its composition and molecular organization is largely unknown. Here, we identify a novel protein of the IMC cytoskeletal network in Toxoplasma gondii, called TgSIP, and conserved among apicomplexan parasites. To finely pinpoint the localization of TgSIP, we used structured illumination super‐resolution microscopy and revealed that it likely decorates the transverse sutures of the plates and the basal end of the IMC. This suggests that TgSIP might contribute to the organization or physical connection among the different components of the IMC. We generated a T.gondii SIP deletion mutant and showed that parasites lacking TgSIP are significantly shorter than wild‐type parasites and show defects in gliding motility, invasion and reduced infectivity in mice.  相似文献   

7.
The proteins in apical organelles of Plasmodium falciparum merozoite play an important role in invasion into erythrocytes. Several rhoptry neck (RON) proteins have been identified in rhoptry proteome of the closely-related apicomplexan parasite, Toxoplasma gondii. Recently, three of P. falciparum proteins orthologous to TgRON proteins, PfRON2, 4 and 5, were found to be located in the rhoptry neck and interact with the micronemal protein apical membrane antigen 1 (PfAMA1) to form a moving junction complex that helps the invasion of merozoite into erythrocyte. However, the other P. falciparum RON proteins have yet to be characterized. Here, we determined that "PFL2505c" (hereafter referred to as pfron3) is the ortholog of the tgron3 in P. falciparum and characterized its protein expression profile, subcellular localization, and complex formation. Protein expression analysis revealed that PfRON3 was expressed primarily in late schizont stage parasites. Immunofluorescence microscopy (IFA) showed that PfRON3 localizes in the apical region of P. falciparum merozoites. Results from immunoelectron microscopy, along with IFA, clarified that PfRON3 localizes in the rhoptry body and not in the rhoptry neck. Even after erythrocyte invasion, PfRON3 was still detectable at the parasite ring stage in the parasitophorous vacuole. Moreover, co-immunoprecipitation studies indicated that PfRON3 interacts with PfRON2 and PfRON4, but not with PfAMA1. These results suggest that PfRON3 partakes in the novel PfRON complex formation (PfRON2, 3, and 4), but not in the moving junction complex (PfRON2, 4, 5, and PfAMA1). The novel PfRON complex, as well as the moving junction complex, might play a fundamental role in erythrocyte invasion by merozoite stage parasites.  相似文献   

8.
Obligate intracellular parasites of the phylum Apicomplexa exhibit gliding motility, a unique form of substrate-dependent locomotion essential for host cell invasion and shown to involve the parasite actin cytoskeleton and myosin motor(s). Toxoplasma gondii has been shown to express three class XIV myosins, TgM-A, -B, and -C. We identified an additional such myosin, TgM-D, and completed the sequences of a related Plasmodium falciparum myosin, PfM-A. Despite divergent structural features, TgM-A purified from parasites bound actin in an ATP-dependent manner. Isoform-specific antibodies revealed that TgM-A and recombinant mycTgM-A were localized right beneath the plasma membrane, and subcellular fractionation indicated a tight membrane association. Recombinant TgM-D also had a peripheral although not as sharply defined localization. Truncation of their respective tail domains abolished peripheral localization and tight membrane association. Conversely, fusion of the tails to green fluorescent protein (GFP) was sufficient to confer plasma membrane localization and sedimentability. The peripheral localization of TgM-A and of the GFP-tail fusion did not depend on an intact F-actin cytoskeleton, and the GFP chimera did not localize to the plasma membrane of HeLa cells. Finally, we showed that the specific localization determinants were in the very C terminus of the TgM-A tail, and site-directed mutagenesis revealed two essential arginine residues. We discuss the evidence for a proteinaceous plasma membrane receptor and the implications for the invasion process.  相似文献   

9.
Red blood cell (RBC) invasion and parasitophorous vacuole (PV) formation by Plasmodium falciparum are critical for the development and pathogenesis of malaria, a continuing global health problem. Expansion of the PV membrane (PVM) during growth is orchestrated by the parasite. This is particularly important in mature RBCs, which lack internal organelles and no longer actively synthesize membranes. Pfs16, a 16-kDa integral PVM protein expressed by gametocytes, was chosen as a model for studying the trafficking of material from the parasite across the PV space to the PVM. The locations of Pfs16-green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter proteins containing distinct regions of Pfs16 were tracked from RBC invasion to emergence. Inclusion of the 53 C-terminal amino acids (aa) of Pfs16 to a GFP reporter construct already containing the N-terminal secretory signal sequence was sufficient for targeting to and retention on the PVM. An amino acid motif identified in this region was also found in seven other known PVM proteins. Removal of the 11 C-terminal aa did not affect PVM targeting, but membrane retention was decreased. Additionally, during emergence from the PVM and RBC, native Pfs16 and the full-length Pfs16-GFP reporter protein were found to concentrate on the ends of the gametocyte. Capping was not observed in constructs lacking the amino acids between the N-terminal secretory signal sequence and the transmembrane domain, suggesting that this region, which is not required for PVM targeting, is involved in capping. This is the first report to define the amino acid domains required for targeting to the P. falciparum PVM.  相似文献   

10.
Haemoglobin degradation during the erythrocytic life stages is the major function of the food vacuole (FV) of Plasmodium falciparum and the target of several anti-malarial drugs that interfere with this metabolic pathway, killing the parasite. Two multi-spanning food vacuole membrane proteins are known, the multidrug resistance protein 1 (PfMDR1) and Chloroquine Resistance Transporter (PfCRT). Both modulate resistance to drugs that act in the food vacuole. To investigate the formation and behaviour of the food vacuole membrane we have generated inducible GFP fusions of chloroquine sensitive and resistant forms of the PfCRT protein. The inducible expression system allowed us to follow newly-induced fusion proteins, and corroborated a previous report of a direct trafficking route from the ER/Golgi to the food vacuole membrane. These parasites also allowed the definition of a food vacuole compartment in ring stage parasites well before haemozoin crystals were apparent, as well as the elucidation of secondary PfCRT-labelled compartments adjacent to the food vacuole in late stage parasites. We demonstrated that in addition to previously demonstrated Brefeldin A sensitivity, the trafficking of PfCRT is disrupted by Dynasore, a non competitive inhibitor of dynamin-mediated vesicle formation. Chloroquine sensitivity was not altered in parasites over-expressing chloroquine resistant or sensitive forms of the PfCRT fused to GFP, suggesting that the PfCRT does not mediate chloroquine transport as a GFP fusion protein.  相似文献   

11.
Obligate intracellular Apicomplexa parasites share a unique invasion mechanism involving a tight interaction between the host cell and the parasite surfaces called the moving junction (MJ). The MJ, which is the anchoring structure for the invasion process, is formed by secretion of a macromolecular complex (RON2/4/5/8), derived from secretory organelles called rhoptries, into the host cell membrane. AMA1, a protein secreted from micronemes and associated with the parasite surface during invasion, has been shown in vitro to bind the MJ complex through a direct association with RON2. Here we show that RON2 is inserted as an integral membrane protein in the host cell and, using several interaction assays with native or recombinant proteins, we define the region that binds AMA1. Our studies were performed both in Toxoplasma gondii and Plasmodium falciparum and although AMA1 and RON2 proteins have diverged between Apicomplexa species, we show an intra-species conservation of their interaction. More importantly, invasion inhibition assays using recombinant proteins demonstrate that the RON2-AMA1 interaction is crucial for both T. gondii and P. falciparum entry into their host cells. This work provides the first evidence that AMA1 uses the rhoptry neck protein RON2 as a receptor to promote invasion by Apicomplexa parasites.  相似文献   

12.
The plastid of Plasmodium falciparum (or 'apicoplast') is the evolutionary homolog of the plant chloroplast and represents a vestige of a photosynthetic past. Apicoplast indispensability indicates that it still provides essential functions to parasites. Similar to plant chloroplasts, the apicoplast is dependent on many nucleus-encoded genes to provide these functions. The apicoplast is surrounded by four membranes, two more than plant chloroplasts. Thus, protein targeting to the apicoplast must overcome additional membrane barriers. In P.falciparum we have analyzed apicoplast targeting using green fluorescent protein (GFP). We demonstrate that protein targeting is at least a two-step process mediated by bipartite N-terminal pre-sequences that consist of a signal peptide for entry into the secretory pathway and a plant-like transit peptide for subsequent import into the apicoplast. The P.falciparum transit peptide is exceptional compared with other known plastid transit peptides in not requiring serine or threonine residues. The pre-sequence components are removed stepwise during apicoplast targeting. Targeting GFP to the apicoplast has also provided the first opportunity to examine apicoplast morphology in live P. falciparum.  相似文献   

13.
The phylum Apicomplexa are a group of obligate intracellular parasites responsible for a wide range of important diseases. Central to the lifecycle of these unicellular parasites is their ability to migrate through animal tissue and invade target host cells. Apicomplexan movement is generated by a unique system of gliding motility in which substrate adhesins and invasion-related proteins are pulled across the plasma membrane by an underlying actin-myosin motor. The myosins of this motor are inserted into a dual membrane layer called the inner membrane complex (IMC) that is sandwiched between the plasma membrane and an underlying cytoskeletal basket. Central to our understanding of gliding motility is the characterization of proteins residing within the IMC, but to date only a few proteins are known. We report here a novel family of six-pass transmembrane proteins, termed the GAPM family, which are highly conserved and specific to Apicomplexa. In Plasmodium falciparum and Toxoplasma gondii the GAPMs localize to the IMC where they form highly SDS-resistant oligomeric complexes. The GAPMs co-purify with the cytoskeletal alveolin proteins and also to some degree with the actin-myosin motor itself. Hence, these proteins are strong candidates for an IMC-anchoring role, either directly or indirectly tethering the motor to the cytoskeleton.Apicomplexan parasites cause a multitude of illnesses through infection of both human and livestock hosts. Members of this phylum include the opportunistic human parasites Toxoplasma gondii and Cryptosporidium parvum, pathogens of livestock, including Theileria annulata and Eimeria tenalla, and most notably the Plasmodium species, the causative agents of malaria in humans. Infection with P. falciparum results in ∼1–3 million deaths and a further 500 million infections annually (1).During various stages of the Apicomplexan lifecycle the parasites require motility to migrate through their insect and vertebrate hosts and to invade and internalize themselves within targeted host cells (24). The parasite''s unique mechanism of gliding motility is powered by an Apicomplexan-specific motor complex termed the actin-myosin motor (5), which resides between the outer plasma membrane and inner membrane complex (IMC)4 (6). The IMC is a continuous patchwork of flattened vesicular cisternae located directly beneath the plasma membrane and overlying the cytoskeletal network (7, 8). The IMC appears to arise from Golgi-associated vesicles flattened during parasite maturation to form large membranous sheets, which envelope the parasite and leave only a small gap at the extreme parasite apex (9).The myosin component of the actin-myosin motor has previously been defined as a tetrameric complex consisting of a class XIV myosin termed Myo-A (10), a myosin tail interacting protein (also called myosin light chain) (7) and the two glideosome-associated proteins GAP45 and GAP50 (11). These motor components are linked to the outer IMC membrane via the membrane proteins GAP45/50 (11). Between the plasma membrane and the IMC are actin filaments held in place through aldolase-mediated contact with the C-terminal tails of plasma membrane-spanning adhesive proteins whose ectodomains bind substrate and host cells (2). To power the forward movement of apicomplexan zoite stages, myosin pulls the actin filaments and their attached adhesins rearward. For this to succeed the GAP-myosin complex must presumably be fixed to the IMC, possibly via interactions with unidentified proteins linking the motor to the underlying cytoskeleton. Studies of fluorescently tagged GAP50 confirm it is relatively immobile within the IMC, however attempts to identify potential anchoring proteins have not been successful and have instead indicated that GAP50 may be immobilized by the lipid-raft like properties of the IMC membranes (12).The actin-myosin complex is confined to the outer IMC membrane while the opposing innermost IMC membrane is studded with 9 nm intramembranous particles, revealed by electron microscopy of freeze fractured Toxoplasma tachyzoites and Plasmodium ookinetes (13, 14). The size of these particles suggests that the proteins involved are likely to form high molecular weight complexes that overlay the parasite''s cytoskeletal network and possibly anchor the IMC to the cytoskeleton (1215). Due to the close apposition of the inner and outer IMC membranes (14, 16), it is possible that the intramembranous particles could bridge the IMC lumen and interact with the GAP-myosin complex contributing to its stabilization within the IMC.To identify putative proteins that might be components of the intramembranous particles, we examined data from the detergent-resistant membrane (DRM) proteome of schizont-stage P. falciparum parasites containing developing merozoites (17, 18). DRMs, or lipid-rafts, were of considerable interest, because they appeared to harbor proteins involved in host cell invasion such as glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored merozoite surface proteins. Our data also indicated that P. falciparum schizont-stage DRMs contained the IMC proteins PfGAP45/50 (17), and recent studies in T. gondii have also suggested that the IMC is enriched in DRMs (12). Another study indicated that when P. falciparum DRM protein complexes were separated by blue native gel electrophoresis, a band was produced containing PfGAP45/50 and PfMyo-A as well as a novel six-pass transmembrane protein (PlasmoDB: PFD1110w, GenBankTM: CAD49269) (18). This protein was related to another six-pass transmembrane DRM protein (PlasmoDB: MAL13P1.130, GenBankTM: CAD52385) we had previously identified in P. falciparum schizont-stage DRMs (17).We show here that MAL13P1.130 and PFD1110w, termed PfGAPM1 and PfGAPM2 (glideosome-associated protein with multiple-membrane spans), respectively, belong to a family of proteins specific to the Apicomplexa and demonstrate that P. falciparum GAPM proteins, and their orthologues in T. gondii, localize to the parasite IMC. The GAPMs form high molecular weight complexes that are resistant to dissociation and solubilization by a variety of common detergents and could therefore be components of the intramembranous particles seen in electron microscopy. When isolated by immunoprecipitation, the GAPM complexes co-purify with components of the actin-myosin motor and particularly the parasite cytoskeletal network suggesting GAPMs could anchor the IMC to the cytoskeleton and perhaps even play a role in tethering the motor to cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

14.
The glideosome associated protein GAP50 is an essential protein in apicomplexan parasites such as Plasmodium, Toxoplasma and Cryptosporidium, several species of which are important human pathogens. The 44.6kDa protein is part of a multi-protein complex known as the invasion machinery or glideosome, which is required for cell invasion and substrate gliding motility empowered by an actin-myosin motor. GAP50 is anchored through its C-terminal transmembrane helix into the inner membrane complex and interacts via a short six residue C-terminal tail with other proteins of the invasion machinery in the pellicle of the parasite. In this paper we describe the 1.7? resolution crystal structure of the soluble GAP50 domain from the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. The structure shows an α??α fold with overall similarity to purple acid phosphatases with, however, little homology regarding the nature of the residues in the active site region of the latter enzyme. While purple acid phosphatases contain a phosphate bridged binuclear Fe-site coordinated by seven side chains with the Fe-ions 3.2? apart, GAP50 in our crystals contains two cobalt ions each with one protein ligand and a distance between the Co(2+) ions of 18?.  相似文献   

15.
The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum infects humans and first targets the liver where liver-stage parasites undergo pre-erythrocytic replication. Liver-stage antigen-1 (LSA-1) is currently the only identified P. falciparum protein for which expression is restricted to liver stages. Yet, the importance of LSA-1 for liver-stage parasite development remains unknown. Here we deleted LSA-1 in the NF54 strain of P. falciparum and analysed the lsa-1(-) parasites throughout their life cycle. lsa-1(-) sporozoites had normal gliding motility and invasion into hepatocytes. Six days after infection of a hepatocytic cell line, lsa-1(-) parasites exhibited a moderate phenotype with an ~50% reduction of late liver-stage forms when compared with wild type. Strikingly, lsa-1(-) parasites growing in SCID/Alb-uPA mice with humanized livers showed a severe defect in late liver-stage differentiation and exo-erythrocytic merozoite formation 7 days after infection, a time point when wild-type parasites develop into mature merozoites. The lsa-1(-) parasites also showed aberrant liver-stage expression of key parasite proteins apical membrane antigen-1 and circumsporozoite protein. Our data show that LSA-1 plays a critical role during late liver-stage schizogony and is thus important in the parasite transition from the liver to blood. LSA-1 is the first P. falciparum protein identified to be required for this transitional stage of the parasite life cycle.  相似文献   

16.
The secretory pathway in plants involves sustained traffic to the cell wall, as matrix components, polysaccharides and proteins reach the cell wall through the endomembrane system. We studied the secretion pattern of cell-wall proteins in tobacco protoplasts and leaf epidermal cells using fluorescent forms of a pectin methylesterase inhibitor protein (PMEI1) and a polygalacturonase inhibitor protein (PGIP2). The two most representative protein fusions, secGFP-PMEI1 and PGIP2-GFP, reached the cell wall by passing through ER and Golgi stacks but using distinct mechanisms. secGFP-PMEI1 was linked to a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor and stably accumulated in the cell wall, regulating the activity of the endogenous pectin methylesterases (PMEs) that are constitutively present in this compartment. A mannosamine-induced non-GPI-anchored form of PMEI1 as well as a form (PMEI1-GFP) that was unable to bind membranes failed to reach the cell wall, and accumulated in the Golgi stacks. In contrast, PGIP2-GFP moved as a soluble cargo protein along the secretory pathway, but was not stably retained in the cell wall, due to internalization to an endosomal compartment and eventually the vacuole. Stable localization of PGIP2 in the wall was observed only in the presence of a specific fungal endopolygalacturonase ligand in the cell wall. Both secGFP-PMEI1 and PGIP2-GFP sorting were distinguishable from that of a secreted GFP, suggesting that rigorous and more complex controls than the simple mechanism of bulk flow are the basis of cell-wall growth and differentiation.  相似文献   

17.
Invasive forms of apicomplexan parasites contain secretory organelles called rhoptries that are essential for entry into host cells. We present a detailed characterization of an unusual rhoptry protein of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, the rhoptry-associated membrane antigen (RAMA) that appears to have roles in both rhoptry biogenesis and host cell invasion. RAMA is synthesized as a 170-kDa protein in early trophozoites, several hours before rhoptry formation and is transiently localized within the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi within lipid-rich microdomains. Regions of the Golgi membrane containing RAMA bud to form vesicles that later mature into rhoptries in a process that is inhibitable by brefeldin A. Other rhoptry proteins such as RhopH3 and RAP1 are found in close apposition with RAMA suggesting direct protein-protein interactions. We suggest that RAMA is involved in trafficking of these proteins into rhoptries. In rhoptries, RAMA is proteolytically processed to give a 60-kDa form that is anchored in the inner face of the rhoptry membrane by means of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. The p60 RAMA form is discharged from the rhoptries of free merozoites and binds to the red blood cell membrane by its most C-terminal region. In early ring stages RAMA is found in association with the parasitophorous vacuole.  相似文献   

18.
The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum assembles knob structures underneath the erythrocyte membrane that help present the major virulence protein, P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein-1 (PfEMP1). Membranous structures called Maurer's clefts are established in the erythrocyte cytoplasm and function as sorting compartments for proteins en route to the RBC membrane, including the knob-associated histidine-rich protein (KAHRP), and PfEMP1. We have generated mutants in which the Maurer's cleft protein, the ring exported protein-1 (REX1) is truncated or deleted. Removal of the C-terminal domain of REX1 compromises Maurer's cleft architecture and PfEMP1-mediated cytoadherance but permits some trafficking of PfEMP1 to the erythrocyte surface. Deletion of the coiled-coil region of REX1 ablates PfEMP1 surface display, trapping PfEMP1 at the Maurer's clefts. Complementation of mutants with REX1 partly restores PfEMP1-mediated binding to the endothelial cell ligand, CD36. Deletion of the coiled-coil region or complete deletion of REX1 is tightly associated with the loss of a subtelomeric region of chromosome 2, encoding KAHRP and other proteins. A KAHRP-green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion expressed in the REX1-deletion parasites shows defective trafficking. Thus, loss of functional REX1 directly or indirectly ablates the assembly of the P. falciparum virulence complex at the surface of host erythrocytes.  相似文献   

19.
Rhoptry associated protein 1 (RAP1) and 2 (RAP2), together with a poorly described third protein RAP3, form the low molecular weight complex within the rhoptries of Plasmodium falciparum. These proteins are thought to play a role in erythrocyte invasion by the extracellular merozoite and are important vaccine candidates. We used gene-targeting technology in P.falciparum blood-stage parasites to disrupt the RAP1 gene, producing parasites that express severely truncated forms of RAP1. Immunoprecipitation experiments suggest that truncated RAP1 species did not complex with RAP2 and RAP3. Consistent with this were the distinct subcellular localizations of RAP1 and 2 in disrupted RAP1 parasites, where RAP2 does not traffic to the rhoptries but is instead located in a compartment that appears related to the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum. These results suggest that RAP1 is required to localize RAP2 to the rhoptries, supporting the hypothesis that rhoptry biogenesis is dependent in part on the secretory pathway in the parasite. The observation that apparently host-protective merozoite antigens are not essential for efficient erythrocyte invasion has important implications for vaccine design.  相似文献   

20.
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