首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 375 毫秒
1.
The fine structure of invasion of human erythrocytes by merozoites of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum was observed in vitro. The invasion process is similar to that described for P. knowlesi. Merozoites enter apical end first by invagination of the erythrocyte membrane. At the rim of the invagination, where merozoite and erythrocyte are in closest contact, the erythrocyte membrane is thickened. The brushy cell coat of the P. falciparum merozoite appears to be lost at this attachment zone. The part of the merozoite within the erythrocyte invagination has no visible coat. The coat on the portion outside is unaltered. Merozoites can successfully invade erythrocytes after 3 hr in the presence of a concentration of chloroquine harmful to feeding stages.  相似文献   

2.
The distributions of ankyrin, spectrin, band 3, and glycophorin A were examined in Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes by immunoelectron microscopy to determine whether movement of parasite proteins and membrane vesicles between the parasitophorous vacuole membrane and erythrocyte surface membrane involves internalization of host membrane skeleton proteins. Monospecific rabbit antisera to spectrin, band 3 and ankyrin and a mouse monoclonal antibody to glycophorin A reacted with these erythrocyte proteins in infected and uninfected human erythrocytes by immunoblotting. Cross-reacting malarial proteins were not detected. The rabbit sera also failed to immunoprecipitate [3H]isoleucine labeled malarial proteins from Triton X-100 and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) extracts of infected erythrocytes. These three antibodies as well as the monoclonal antibody to glycophorin A bound to the membrane skeleton of infected and uninfected erythrocytes. The parasitophorous vacuole membrane was devoid of bound antibody, a result indicating that this membrane contains little, if any, of these host membrane proteins. With ring-, trophozoite- and schizont-infected erythrocytes, spectrin, band 3 and glycophorin A were absent from intracellular membranes including Maurer's clefts and other vesicles in the erythrocyte cytoplasm. In contrast, Maurer's clefts were specifically labeled by anti-ankyrin antibody. There was a slight, corresponding decrease in labeling of the membrane skeleton of infected erythrocytes. A second, morphologically distinct population of circular, vesicle-like membranes in the erythrocyte cytoplasm was not labeled with anti-ankyrin antibody. We conclude that membrane movement between the host erythrocyte surface membrane and parasitophorous vacuole membrane involves preferential sorting of ankyrin into a subpopulation of cytoplasmic membranes.  相似文献   

3.
Apicomplexan pathogens are obligate intracellular parasites. To enter cells, they must bind with high affinity to host cell receptors and then uncouple these interactions to complete invasion. Merozoites of Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite responsible for the most dangerous form of malaria, invade erythrocytes using a family of adhesins called Duffy binding ligand-erythrocyte binding proteins (DBL-EBPs). The best-characterized P. falciparum DBL-EBP is erythrocyte binding antigen 175 (EBA-175), which binds erythrocyte surface glycophorin A. We report that EBA-175 is shed from the merozoite at around the point of invasion. Shedding occurs by proteolytic cleavage within the transmembrane domain (TMD) at a site that is conserved across the DBL-EBP family. We show that EBA-175 is cleaved by PfROM4, a rhomboid protease that localizes to the merozoite plasma membrane, but not by other rhomboids tested. Mutations within the EBA-175 TMD that abolish cleavage by PfROM4 prevent parasite growth. Our results identify a crucial role for intramembrane proteolysis in the life cycle of this pathogen.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

During the erythrocytic cycle of Plasmodium, the parasite develops within an enclosed space, the parasitophorous vacuole, formed by endocytosis of an invasive stage, the merozoite. Among the erythrocyte membrane proteins possibly acting as a receptor for the attachment of P. falciparum merozoites to human erythrocytes is glycophorin A Isolated glycophorin inhibits merozoite entry in a competitive manner, perhaps via association with a 155 kDa surface protein. Another protein that competitively inhibits merozoite invasion, is band 3, the erythrocyte anion transport protein. The protein bearing Duffy blood group antigens may act to modulate invasion, but does not behave as a receptor.  相似文献   

5.
Invasion of the merozoite form of Plasmodium falciparum into human erythrocytes involves multiple receptor-ligand interactions. The EBA175 protein of P. falciparum has been shown to be the ligand that binds to a sialic acid-dependent site on glycophorin A. We have identified a novel P. falciparum ligand, termed erythrocyte-binding antigen 140 (EBA140), that shares structural features and homology with EBA175. Subcellular localization of EBA140 suggests that it is located in the micronemes, the same localization as EBA175. EBA140 binds to a sialic acid-dependent receptor on the surface of human erythrocytes. Binding of EBA140 to this erythrocyte receptor is sensitive to neuraminidase and resistant to trypsin, proteinase K and pronase. The protease-resistant properties of the erythrocyte receptor suggests that it is not glycophorin A or C. Additionally, analysis of mutant erythrocytes from humans has shown that EBA140 does not bind glycophorin B. Interestingly, we have identified a parasite line that lacks the eba140 gene, suggesting that this protein is not essential for in vitro invasion. These results suggest that EBA140 may be involved in merozoite invasion using a sialic acid-dependent receptor on human erythrocytes.  相似文献   

6.
A Plasmodium falciparum protein of 130,000 molecular weight (m.w.) has been identified, cloned in Escherichia coli, and completely sequenced (Kochan et al. 1986). The protein appeared to bind to soluble glycophorin, a host erythrocyte surface protein. In the present study, extracts of parasites from different intraerythrocytic stages were immunoblotted with antibodies, raised against a 30,000 m.w. fusion protein corresponding to the 3' end of the 130,000 m.w. protein. It was demonstrated that the protein is synthesized at the trophozoite stage, accumulates at the schizont stage, and is processed at the merozoite stage to a triplet of three polypeptides. The processed proteins are present in the culture supernatant at the time of merozoite burst from the red cell. Immunofluorescent staining of the parasite at different intracellular stages indicates that the protein is localized on the parasite at the trophozoite stage. At late trophozoite stage, it appears to be transported to the erythrocyte cytoplasm, where it is present in small vesicles or inclusions. In mature schizonts the protein accumulates around the plasma membrane of the erythrocyte. At the segmenter stage, just prior to merozoite release, it appears also to surround the intracellular merozoite, as well as the erythrocyte plasma membrane. The soluble 130,000 m.w. protein binds to erythrocytes but binds significantly greater to erythrocyte membranes, suggesting it binds to an internal domain of glycophorin rather than the domain exposed on the surface. The 130,000 m.w. protein is present in 11 different geographic isolates of P. falciparum from diverse geographic origins. Its molecular weight is similar in all isolates.  相似文献   

7.
Immune sera from mice immunized with the 143/140 kDa protein have been shown to partially block erythrocyte invasion by P. knowlesi merozoites. Therefore, immunoelectron microscopy utilizing ultracryomicrotomy, antibody to 143/140 kDa protein, and protein A gold particles were used to determine the precise localization of this protein in malarial parasites. Gold particles were not seen associated with young trophozoites but appeared in the parasite cytoplasm as the parasites grew to multi-nucleate schizonts. In presegmenter-schizonts, gold particles were associated with the well-developed endoplasmic reticulum, the parasite plasma membrane, and the parasitophorous vacuole membrane. The surface of merozoites was covered with gold particles. Maurer's clefts, which appeared in Plasmodium infected erythrocytes, were also associated with gold particles. These observations suggest that 143/140 kDa protective malarial proteins may be synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum of P. knowlesi schizonts before being transported to the surface of the schizonts and merozoites. Shedding of the merozoite surface coat may be responsible for the presence of the 143/140 kDa proteins in the parasitophorous vacuole and Maurer's clefts.  相似文献   

8.
The rhoptry is an organelle of the malarial merozoite which has been suggested to play a role in parasite invasion of its host cell, the erythrocyte. A monoclonal antibody selected for reactivity with this organelle identifies a parasite synthesized protein of 110 kD. From biosynthetic labeling experiments it was demonstrated that the protein is synthesized midway through the erythrocytic cycle (the trophozoite stage) but immunofluorescence indicates the protein is not localized in the organelle until the final stage (segmenter stage) of intraerythrocytic development. Immunoelectron microscopy shows that the protein is localized in the matrix of the rhoptry organelle and on membranous whorls secreted from the merozoite. mAb recognition of the protein is dithiothreitol (DTT) labile, indicating that the conformation of the epitope is dependent on a disulfide linkage. During erythrocyte reinvasion by the extracellular merozoite, immunofluorescence shows the rhoptry protein discharging from the merozoite and spreading around the surface of the erythrocyte. The protein is located in the plasma membrane of the newly invaded erythrocyte. These studies suggest that the 110-kD rhoptry protein is inserted into the membrane of the host erythrocyte during merozoite invasion.  相似文献   

9.
Resealed erythrocyte ghosts were prepared under different experimental conditions and were tested in vitro for susceptibility to infection with the human malarial parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. Resealed ghosts, prepared by dialyzing erythrocytes in narrow membrane tubing against low ionic strength buffer that was supplemented with magnesium ATP, were as susceptible to parasite infection as were normal erythrocytes. There was a direct correlation between intraerythrocytic ATP content and susceptibility to parasite infection. Neither MgCl2 nor sodium ATP could be substituted for magnesium ATP in maintaining high intraerythrocytic ATP concentration. When resealed ghosts were loaded with antispectrin IgG, malaria merozoite invasion was inhibited. At an average intracellular antispectrin IgG concentration of 3.5 micrograms/10(8) cells, there was a 35% inhibition of parasite invasion. This inhibition was due to spectrin crosslinking within the resealed ghosts, since the monovalent, Fab' fragments of antispectrin IgG had no inhibitory effect on invasion. These results indicate that the cytoskeleton plays a role in the complex process of merozoite entry into the host erythrocyte.  相似文献   

10.
The asexual development of malaria parasites inside the erythrocyte is accompanied by changes in the composition, structure, and function of the host cell membrane and cytoplasm. The parasite exports a membrane network into the host cytoplasm and several proteins that are inserted into the erythrocyte membrane, although none of these proteins has been shown to have enzymatic activity. We report here that a functional malaria parasite-encoded vacuolar (V)-H(+)-ATPase is exported to the erythrocyte and localized in membranous structures and in the plasma membrane of the infected erythrocyte. This localization was determined by separation of parasite and erythrocyte membranes and determination of enzyme marker activities and by immunofluorescence microscopy assays using antibodies against the B subunit of the malarial V-H(+)-ATPase and erythrocyte (spectrins) and parasite (merozoite surface protein 1) markers. Our results suggest that this pump has a role in the maintenance of the intracellular pH (pH(i)) of the infected erythrocyte. Our results also indicate that although the pH(i) maintained by the V-H(+)-ATPase is important for maximum uptake of small metabolites at equilibrium, it does not appear to affect transport across the erythrocyte membrane and is, therefore, not involved in the previously described phenomenon of increased permeability of infected erythrocytes that is sensitive to chloride channel inhibitors (new permeation pathway). This constitutes the first report of the presence of a functional enzyme of parasite origin in the plasma membrane of its host.  相似文献   

11.
During Plasmodium falciparum merozoite invasion into human and mouse erythrocytes, a 110-kDa rhoptry protein is secreted from the organelle into the erythrocyte membrane. In the present study our interest was to examine the interaction of rhoptry proteins of P. falciparum with the erythrocyte membrane. It was observed that the complex of rhoptry proteins of 140/130/110 kDa bind directly to a trypsin sensitive site on intact mouse erythrocytes, and not human, saimiri, or other erythrocytes. However, when erythrocytes were disrupted by hypotonic lysis, rhoptry proteins of 140/130/110 kDa were found to bind to membranes and inside-out vesicles prepared from human, mouse, saimiri, rhesus, rat, and rabbit erythrocytes. A binding site on the cytoplasmic face of the erythrocyte membrane suggests that the rhoptry proteins may be translocated across the lipid bilayer during merozoite invasion. Furthermore, pretreatment of human erythrocytes with a specific peptide derived from MSA-1, the major P. falciparum merozoite surface antigen of MW 190,000-200,000, induced binding of the 140/130/110-kDa complex. The rhoptry proteins bound equally to normal human erythrocytes and erythrocytes treated with neuraminidase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin indicating the binding site was independent of glycophorin and other major surface proteins. The rhoptry protein complex also bound specifically to liposomes prepared from different types of phospholipids. Liposomes containing PE effectively block binding of the rhoptry proteins to mouse cells, suggesting that there are two binding sites on the mouse membrane for the 140/130/110-kDa complex, one protein and a second, possibly lipid in nature. The results of this study suggest that the 140/130/110 kDa protein complex may interact directly with sites in the lipid bilayer of the erythrocyte membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Invasion of erythrocytes by merozoites of the monkey malaria, Plasmodium knowlesi, was investigated by electron microscopy. The apical end of the merozoite makes initial contact with the erythrocyte, creating a small depression in the erythrocyte membrane. The area of the erythrocyte membrane to which the merozoite is attached becomes thickened and forms a junction with the plasma membrane of the merozoite. As the merozoite enters the invagination in the erythrocyte surface, the junction, which is in the form of a circumferential zone of attachment between the erythrocyte and merozoite, moves along the confronted membranes to maintain its position at the orifice of the invagination. When entry is completed, the orifice closes behind the parasite in the fashion of an iris diaphragm, and the junction becomes a part of the parasitophorous vacuole. The movement of the junction during invasion is an important component of the mechanism by which the merozoite enters the erythrocyte. The extracellular merozoite is covered with a prominent surface coat. During invasion, this coat appears to be absent from the portion of the merozoite within the erythrocyte invagination, but the density of the surface coat outside the invagination (beyond the junction) is unaltered.  相似文献   

13.
The profound changes in the morphology, antigenicity, and functional properties of the host erythrocyte membrane induced by intraerythrocytic parasites of the human malaria Plasmodium falciparum are poorly understood at the molecular level. We have used mouse mAbs to identify a very large malarial protein (Mr approximately 300,000) that is exported from the parasite and deposited on the cytoplasmic face of the erythrocyte membrane. This protein is denoted P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 2 (Pf EMP 2). The mAbs did not react with the surface of intact infected erythrocytes, nor was Pf EMP 2 accessible to exogenous proteases or lactoperoxidase-catalyzed radioiodination of intact cells. The mAbs also had no effect on in vitro cytoadherence of infected cells to the C32 amelanotic melanoma cell line. These properties distinguish Pf EMP 2 from Pf EMP 1, the cell surface malarial protein of similar size that is associated with the cytoadherent property of P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes. The mAbs did not react with Pf EMP 1. In one strain of parasite there was a significant difference in relative mobility of the 125I-surface-labeled Pf EMP 1 and the biosynthetically labeled Pf EMP 2, further distinguishing these proteins. By cryo-thin-section immunoelectron microscopy we identified organelles involved in the transit of Pf EMP through the erythrocyte cytoplasm to the internal face of the erythrocyte membrane where the protein is associated with electron-dense material under knobs. These results show that the intraerythrocytic malaria parasite has evolved a novel system for transporting malarial proteins beyond its own plasma membrane, through a vacuolar membrane and the host erythrocyte cytoplasm to the erythrocyte membrane, where they become membrane bound and presumably alter the properties of this membrane to the parasite's advantage.  相似文献   

14.
Erythrocyte-binding antigen 175 (EBA175) is one of the best-characterized Plasmodium falciparum merozoite ligands; the recently solved crystal structure of EBA175 reveals that terminal sialic acids on the erythrocyte glycoprotein glycophorin A are a crucial factor for erythrocyte recognition by EBA175 because they lock into pockets on its surface. Comparison with Plasmodium reichenowi EBA175 indicates that these interactions have a pivotal role in the host-specific adaptations of parasite ligands.  相似文献   

15.
Plasmodium falciparum merozoites engage the erythrocyte surface through several receptor (host)-ligand (parasite) interactions during a brief exchange that results in parasite invasion of the red blood cell. Tens of thousands of these events occur during the initial cycle of blood-stage infections but advance towards billions as the parasite becomes visible to microscopists attempting to diagnose the underlying cause of illness in febrile patients. Advancing blood-stage infection leads to massive proportions of erythrocytes that rupture during repetitive cycles of asexual reproduction. As the infection leads to illness, non-immune or semi-immune individuals can suffer from life-threatening consequences of severe malarial anemia that play a leading role in pathogenesis. Through natural selection, some erythrocyte membrane polymorphisms are likely to have reduced the invasion success of the P. falciparum merozoite and increased the fitness of the human host population.  相似文献   

16.
The merozoite, the extracellular form of the erythrocyte stage of the malarial parasite, invades the erythrocyte and develops intracellularly. Cloned hybridoma cell lines secreting monoclonal antibodies directed against the merozoite surface were selected by indirect immunofluorescent assay by using intact isolated merozoites. Monoclonal antibodies to a 200,000 m.w. merozoite surface antigen were selected and were used to characterize this protein and its role in erythrocyte invasion. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that the antigen was located exclusively on the merozoite surface coat, distributed evenly over the entire surface. The 200,000 m.w. protein incorporated [3H]glucosamine, suggesting that it is a glycoprotein and could be purified to homogeneity by using immuno-affinity chromatography. Freshly isolated, invasive merozoites retained the 200,000 m.w. antigen, but the protein was rapidly cleaved to proteins of 90,000 and 50,000 m.w. when the merozoite was extracellular. The 50,000 m.w. fragment was retained the epitope binding to monoclonal antibody 5B1 and were labeled with [3H]glucosamine. Monoclonal antibodies against the 200,000 m.w. antigen partially inhibited merozoite invasion into erythrocytes.  相似文献   

17.
The invasion of erythrocytes by Plasmodium merozoites requires specific interactions between host receptors and parasite ligands. Parasite proteins that bind erythrocyte receptors during invasion are localized in apical organelles called micronemes and rhoptries. The regulated secretion of microneme and rhoptry proteins to the merozoite surface to enable receptor binding is a critical step in the invasion process. The sequence of these secretion events and the external signals that trigger release are not known. We have used time-lapse video microscopy to study changes in intracellular calcium levels in Plasmodium falciparum merozoites during erythrocyte invasion. In addition, we have developed flow cytometry based methods to measure relative levels of cytosolic calcium and study surface expression of apical organelle proteins in P. falciparum merozoites in response to different external signals. We demonstrate that exposure of P. falciparum merozoites to low potassium ion concentrations as found in blood plasma leads to a rise in cytosolic calcium levels through a phospholipase C mediated pathway. Rise in cytosolic calcium triggers secretion of microneme proteins such as the 175 kD erythrocyte binding antigen (EBA175) and apical membrane antigen-1 (AMA-1) to the merozoite surface. Subsequently, interaction of EBA175 with glycophorin A (glyA), its receptor on erythrocytes, restores basal cytosolic calcium levels and triggers release of rhoptry proteins. Our results identify for the first time the external signals responsible for the sequential release of microneme and rhoptry proteins during erythrocyte invasion and provide a starting point for the dissection of signal transduction pathways involved in regulated exocytosis of these key apical organelles. Signaling pathway components involved in apical organelle discharge may serve as novel targets for drug development since inhibition of microneme and rhoptry secretion can block invasion and limit blood-stage parasite growth.  相似文献   

18.
J Kochan  M Perkins  J V Ravetch 《Cell》1986,44(5):689-696
Erythrocyte invasion by the malarial merozoite is a receptor-mediated process, an obligatory step in the development of the parasite. The Plasmodium falciparum protein GBP-130, which binds to the erythrocyte receptor glycophorin, is shown here to encode the binding site in a domain composed of a tandemly repeated 50 amino acid sequence. The amino acid sequence of GBP-130, deduced from the cloned and sequenced gene, reveals that the protein contains 11 highly conserved 50 amino acid repeats and a charged N-terminal region of 225 amino acids. Binding studies on recombinant proteins expressing different numbers of repeats suggest that a correlation exists between glycophorin binding and repeat number. Thus, a repeat domain, a common feature of plasmodial antigens, has been shown to have a function independent of the immune system. This conclusion is further supported by the ability of antibodies directed against the repeat sequence to inhibit the in vitro invasion of erythrocytes by merozoites.  相似文献   

19.
Plasmodium malaria parasites multiply within erythrocytes and possess a repertoire of proteins whose function is to recognize and invade these vertebrate host cells. One such protein involved in erythrocyte invasion is the micronemal protein, Erythrocyte Binding-Like (EBL), which has been studied as a potential target of vaccine development in Plasmodium vivax (PvDBP) and Plasmodium falciparum (EBA-175). In the rodent malaria parasite model Plasmodium yoelii, specific substitutions in the EBL regions responsible for intracellular trafficking (17XL parasite line) or receptor recognition (17X1.1pp. parasite line), paradoxically increase invasion ability and virulence rather than abolish EBL function. Attempts to disrupt the ebl gene locus in the 17XL and 17XNL lines were unsuccessful, suggesting EBL essentiality. To understand the mechanisms behind these potentially conflicting outcomes, we generated 17XL-based transfectants in which ebl expression is suppressed with anhydrotetracycline (ATc) and investigated merozoite behavior during erythrocyte invasion. In the absence of ATc, EBL was secreted to the merozoite surface, whereas following ATc administration parasitemia was negligible in vivo. Merozoites lacking EBL were unable to invade erythrocytes in vitro, indicating that EBL has a critical role for erythrocyte invasion. Quantitative time-lapse imaging revealed that with ATc administration a significant number of merozoites were detached from the erythrocyte after the erythrocyte deformation event and no echinocytosis was observed, indicating that EBL is required for merozoites to establish an irreversible connection with erythrocytes during invasion.  相似文献   

20.
The ultrastructure of red cell invasion in malaria infections: a review   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
L H Bannister  A R Dluzewski 《Blood cells》1990,16(2-3):257-92; discussion 293-7
Within the circulation, the invasive stage of Plasmodium is the merozoite, a small elliptical cell. Electron microscopy shows that the merozoite can attach reversibly to erythrocytes by its adhesive coat, then form a close, irreversible contact by its apical end, triggering secretion from membranous vesicles (rhoptries and micronemes) on to the erythrocyte membrane. This causes the erythrocyte membrane to invaginate and the merozoite then becomes enclosed within a cavity lined by interiorized membrane. In uninfected erythrocytes, the surface membrane consists of a lipid bilayer in which lie various integral membrane proteins and glycoproteins, associated at their cytoplasmic ends with a network of other proteins constituting the membrane skeleton. There is much evidence that during invasion the membrane proteins and skeleton are removed from the invaginated membrane. There are also ultrastructural data suggesting that the rhoptries are able to generate membrane-like materials, which are inserted into the erythrocyte membrane to cause its inward expansion. Further expansion may be induced by the liberation of parasite secretions from another set of organelles (microspheres) released after the first stage of invasion.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号