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1.
Invasion of erythrocytes by malaria parasites is known to be blocked by proteolytic digestion of merozoite receptors allegedly present in red cell membranes. This information was used in the present work to develop a simple and convenient assay for parasite invasion into red blood cells and for evaluating the role played by red cell membrane components in this process. Synchronized in vitro cultures of Plasmodium falciparum containing only ring stages were subjected to either trypsin or pronase digestion, a treatment that neither affected ring development into schizonts nor mature merozoite release. Cells from this culture were not invaded by the released merozoites. However, upon addition of untreated human red blood cells, marked invasion was observed, either microscopically or as [3H]isoleucine incorporation. The new assay circumvents the need for separating schizonts from uninfected cells and provides a convenient means for assessing how chemical and biochemical manipulation of red blood cells affects their invasiveness by parasites. Using this assay, we verified that sheep and rabbit erythrocytes were resistant to invasion, as were human erythrocytes which had been treated with trypsin, pronase or neuraminidase. Chymotrypsin digestion of human erythrocytes was without effect on invasion. Human erythrocytes which were chemically modified with the impermeant amino reactive reagent H2DIDS, or with the crosslinker of spectrin, TCEA, were found to resist invasion. The results underscore the involvement of surface membrane components as well as of elements of the cytoskeleton in the process of parasite invasion into erythrocytes.  相似文献   

2.
The intracellular development of the erythrocytic stage of the malarial parasite (merozoite) is initiated by the attachment of the parasite to the erythrocyte surface. This paper describes an assay system to investigate Plasmodium falciparum merozoite entry into the host cell and reports on three observations regarding this interaction. (a) Merozoites do not invade human erythrocytes treated with either trypsin or neuraminidase, and both enzymes partially cleave glycophorin A, the major erythrocyte surface sialoglycoprotein. (b) A membrane protein fraction containing glycophorin A will, at low concentrations, inhibit the invasion of isolated merozoites into erythrocytes; no other fractions of membrane proteins have appreciable effects on the reinvasion. (c) Merozoites do not reinvade erythrocytes preincubated with F ab' fragments of antibody prepared against glycophorin A. Together, these three observations imply a role for glycophorin A in the attachment of the malarial parasite to the erythrocyte surface.  相似文献   

3.
A Plasmodium falciparum malaria blood stage antigen was detected using a human monoclonal antibody (MAb A52A6) obtained from a clinically immune donor. Immunofluorescence analysis showed that the MAb reacted with the intracellular parasite throughout the asexual blood stage cycle as well as with gametocytes. The MAb also reacted with the surface of erythrocytes containing late stage P. falciparum parasites. The antigen seen by the MAb was species- but not strain- or isolate-specific. At rupture of the infected erythrocytes, antigenic material was deposited on the membrane of uninfected cells surrounding the parasite. At merozoite invasion MAb reactive material was present on the invaginating erythrocyte membrane, indicating an involvement of the antigen in the invasion process. This was also indicated by the high capacity of the MAb to inhibit merozoite invasion in vitro. The antigen appears to be a phosphoglycolipid, sensitive to phospholipase and present in lipid extracts of P. falciparum-infected erythrocytes.  相似文献   

4.
Stage-dependent inhibition of chloroquine on Plasmodium falciparum in vitro   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Morphological observation of the life cycle of the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, in highly synchronous cultures after an exposure to therapeutic concentrations of chloroquine in ring, trophozoite and schizont stages, respectively, were carried out in order to determine the influence of chloroquine on the growth of the different stages of the malarial parasites. It was found that chloroquine could not affect merozoite invasion of the erythrocytes; the ring stage was more sensitive to chloroquine than the trophozoite and schizont stages; and chloroquine in therapeutic concentrations prevented only the transformation of rings to trophozoites and could not affect the transformations of trophozoites to schizonts and schizonts to new rings. The determination of the IC50 of chloroquine showed that the IC50 of trophozoites was about 6 times as high as that of rings.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Plasmodium falciparum, the causative agent of the most severe form of malaria in humans invades erythrocytes using multiple ligand-receptor interactions. The P. falciparum reticulocyte binding-like homologue proteins (PfRh or PfRBL) are important for entry of the invasive merozoite form of the parasite into red blood cells. We have analysed two members of this protein family, PfRh2a and PfRh2b, and show they undergo a complex series of proteolytic cleavage events before and during merozoite invasion. We show that PfRh2a undergoes a cleavage event in the transmembrane region during invasion consistent with activity of the membrane associated PfROM4 protease that would result in release of the ectodomain into the supernatant. We also show that PfRh2a and PfRh2b bind to red blood cells and have defined the erythrocyte-binding domain to a 15 kDa region at the N-terminus of each protein. Antibodies to this receptor-binding region block merozoite invasion demonstrating the important function of this domain. This region of PfRh2a and PfRh2b has potential in a combination vaccine with other erythrocyte binding ligands for induction of antibodies that would block a broad range of invasion pathways for P. falciparum into human erythrocytes.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The purpose of the present study was to confirm the effectiveness of saponin hemolysis for concentrating ring-infected erythrocytes in Plasmodium falciparum cultures and to determine the actual numbers of the enriched parasites, not just percentage parasitemia. This is important because various molecular biology and vaccine development against malaria require useable quantities of pure culture with minimal number of uninfected erythrocytes at all stages. Synchronized cultures of three P. falciparum strains were exposed to 0.015% isotonic saponin solution for 30 minutes on ice. They were centrifuged and the pellets were treated again with saponin solution for 3-7 minutes. Initially, most of the cultures contained approximately 10(10) erythrocytes and 1-7% parasitemia, but at the end of the enrichment up to 10(8) of erythrocytes containing 90-99.8% parasitemia were recovered (maximal enrichment). From microscopic examination of the cells it was calculated that the hemolysis rate of uninfected and infected erythrocytes was circa 27 to 1, which could account for the enrichment. Studies by other investigators have suggested that P. falciparum merozoite invasion decreases erythrocyte membrane lipids, and it has been reported that reduction of membrane cholesterol could make erythrocytes saponin-resistant. The possibility that merozoite invasion made erythrocytes partially resistant to saponin hemolysis was strengthened by the observation that the proportions of multiple infections increased significantly in the enriched cultures. However, mature asexual parasites could not be concentrated by this method, suggesting possible differences between the membranes of erythrocytes containing ring forms and those of trophozoites and schizonts. Ring-infected erythrocytes freshly from malaria patients could also not be concentrated by the method described here, suggesting that the ability to induce saponin resistance in erythrocytes was acquired by the parasites in vitro.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Studies of malaria proteases have focused on two general groups, corresponding to activities specific to malaria parasites: (1) proteases involved in hemoglobin degradation which are active in the food vacuole and which exhibit optimal activity at low pH; and (2) proteases specific to schizonts and/or merozoites which are involved in merozoite maturation and red blood cell invasion and which exhibit optimal activity at neutral pH. In this paper, Catherine Braun Breton and Luis H. Pereira da Silva will focus on those activities necessary for the release of infectious merozoites and the entry of the parasite into its host cell.  相似文献   

11.
The human mAb 33G2 has high capacity to inhibit in vitro invasion of erythrocytes by Plasmodium falciparum merozoites and, thus, is of special interest with regard to protective immunity against the parasite. In order to obtain more information about asexual blood stage Ag of P. falciparum that are seen by this antibody, material from synchronized P. falciparum cultures was studied by immunofluorescence, immunoelectron microscopy, and immunoblotting. Reactivity was mainly confined to the membrane of infected erythrocytes. Soon after merozoite invasion the antibody stained the erythrocyte membrane. This membrane-associated staining faded during intracellular development of the parasites. Beginning about 18 h after invasion, a dotted pattern appeared which increased in strength with time and persisted to schizont rupture. Pf155/RESA was the major Ag recognized in immunoblots of parasites collected throughout the entire erythrocytic cycle, although other polypeptides also bound the antibody. Among these was a 260-kDa polypeptide found in late trophozoites and schizonts. The specificity of the antibody was analyzed with synthetic peptides corresponding to repeated sequences in the P. falciparum Ag Pf155/RESA, Pf11.1, and Ag332. Synthetic peptides related to Ag332 were the most efficient inhibitors of antibody binding in immunofluorescence studies and cell ELISA. A beta-galactosidase-Ag332 fusion protein was also efficient in reversing reinvasion inhibition caused by 33G2. These results define a family of cross-reactive P. falciparum Ag recognized by mAb 33G2 and suggest that Ag332 was its original target.  相似文献   

12.
The secretory organelles of Plasmodium knowlesi were studied ultrastructurally to examine their mode of action during invasion. The formation of lamellar structures in merozoite rhoptries within late stage schizonts is prevented by the protease inhibitors chymostatin and leupeptin. Under normal conditions vesicles lined by 6-nm membranes are formed in rhoptries during erythrocyte invasion. Stereoscopic viewing of tilted sections shows that where the merozoite apex contacts the parasitophorous vacuole (PV) membrane during invasion, a domed elevation of the PV surface lies within the mouth of the rhoptry duct in contact with the secretory matrix. The membrane of the early invasion pit is thinner (6 nm) than the red cell membrane elsewhere, and sheets of lamellar material are frequently present on the invasion pit surface. These findings support the proposal that the rhoptry-microneme complex is capable of generating membranous material and inserting it into the red cell surface in a controlled manner to create the parasitophorous vacuole. On the basis of this model, measurements from serial sections show that the rhoptries could provide enough material to create a membrane lining the parasitophorous vacuole, and, with the contribution of the microspheres, could double it to accommodate the early ring stage of the parasite.  相似文献   

13.
The secretory organelles of Plasmodium knowlesi were studied ultrastructurally to examine their mode of action during invasion. The formation of lamellar structures in merozoite rhoptries within late stage schizonts is prevented by the protease inhibitors chymostatin and leupeptin. Under normal conditions vesicles lined by 6-nm membranes are formed in rhoptries during erythrocyte invasion. Stereoscopic viewing of tilted sections shows that where the merozoite apex contacts the parasitophorous vacuole (PV) membrane during invasion, a domed elevation of the PV surface lies within the mouth of the rhoptry duct in contact with the secretory matrix. The membrane of the early invasion pit is thinner (6 nm) than the red cell membrane elsewhere, and sheets of lamellar material are frequently present on the invasion pit surface. These findings support the proposal that the rhoptry-microneme complex is capable of generating membranous material and inserting it into the red cell surface in a controlled manner to create the parasitophorous vacuole. On the basis of this model, measurements from serial sections show that the rhoptries could provide enough material to create a membrane lining the parasitophorous vacuole, and, with the contribution of the microspheres, could double it to accommodate the early ring stage of the parasite.  相似文献   

14.
The simian malaria Plasmodium knowlesi provides many favourable features as an experimental model; it can be grown in vivo or in vitro. Parasites of defined variant specificity and stage of development are readily obtained and both the natural host and a highly susceptible host are available for experimental infection and vaccination trials. Proteins synthesized by erythrocytic P. knowlesi parasites are characteristic of the developmental stage, as are the alterations that the parasite induces in the red cell surface. Erythrocytic merozoites are anatomically and biochemically complex, their surface alone is covered by at least eight distinct polypeptides. Immune serum from merozoite-immunized rhesus recognizes many parasite components, especially those synthesized by schizonts. All of the merozoite surface components and some of the schizont-infected red cell surface antigens are recognized by such immune sera. Rhesus monkeys rendered immune by repeated infection may by contrast recognize comparatively few antigens; a positive correlation was established for these 'naturally' immunized monkeys between protection and antibody directed against a 74 000 molecular mass antigen. Immunization with this purified antigen confers partial protection. Other putative protective antigens have been identified by monoclonal antibodies that inhibit merozoite invasion of red cells in vitro. The antigens recognized by inhibitory monoclonal antibodies are synthesized exclusively by schizonts and are processed, at the time of schizont rupture and merozoite release, to smaller molecules that are present on the merozoite surface. The multiplicity of protective antigens is clearly demonstrated by the fact that seven distinct merozoite surface antigens are recognized by three different inhibitory monoclonals. None of the protective antigens identified are variant or strain specific.  相似文献   

15.
Merozoites of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum use several receptors for cellular engagement when they invade human red blood cells. Recently, a merozoite erythrocyte-binding protein, EBA-140, has been identified that specifically binds to glycophorin C on red blood cells. Up to 50% of Melanesians have a deletion in this gene, and the resultant Gerbich-negative red blood cells are relatively resistant to invasion. While discovery of multiple pathways for invasion could confound the search for suitable vaccine targets, they could also be considered in the design of therapeutic interventions that prevent malaria parasites entering red blood cells.  相似文献   

16.
The resistance of malaria parasites to current anti-malarial drugs is an issue of major concern globally. Recently we identified a Plasmodium falciparum cell membrane aspartyl protease, which binds to erythrocyte band 3, and is involved in merozoite invasion. Here we report the complete primary structure of P. falciparum signal peptide peptidase (PfSPP), and demonstrate that it is essential for parasite invasion and growth in human erythrocytes. Gene silencing suggests that PfSPP may be essential for parasite survival in human erythrocytes. Remarkably, mammalian signal peptide peptidase inhibitors (Z-LL)2-ketone and L-685,458 effectively inhibited malaria parasite invasion as well as growth in human erythrocytes. In contrast, DAPT, an inhibitor of a related γ-secretase/presenilin-1, was ineffective. Thus, SPP inhibitors specific for PfSPP may function as potent anti-malarial drugs against the blood stage malaria.  相似文献   

17.
P Hermentin  G Neunziger  B Enders  W Dahr 《Blut》1987,54(2):115-122
We have examined the inhibitory potencies of glycophorin A, a mixture of glycophorins B and C, chymotryptic fragments of GpA, desialylated GpA, alkaliborohydride treated GpA, and the O-linked tetrasaccharide isolated from GpA on the invasion of human red blood cells by synchronous Plasmodium falciparum (strain FCB). 50% inhibition of invasion, as measured by 3H-hypoxanthine incorporation into parasites, was achieved at 14 and 155 microM for GpA and GpA-CH1, respectively. We have noticed, however, that isolated GpA exhibits a toxic effect on the intraerythrocytic growth of the parasite whereas the chymotryptic fragment (amino acid residues 1-64 of GpA) does not. Thus the inhibitory potency of isolated GpA during erythrocyte invasion by the merozoite should be regarded as the result of both an inhibitory and a toxic effect. The inhibitory effect should be attributed to the carbohydrate-rich outer portion of GpA carrying clusters of neuraminic acid. The toxic effect should be attributed to the hydrophobic region of GpA which might be capable of inserting into the membrane of free merozoites and/or erythrocytes. Our data suggest that results previously obtained with glycoprotein inhibitors carrying hydrophobic portions may have to be questioned.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The Apicomplexan parasites Toxoplasma and Plasmodium, respectively, cause toxoplasmosis and malaria in humans and although they invade different host cells they share largely conserved invasion mechanisms. Plasmodium falciparum merozoite invasion of red blood cells results from a series of co-ordinated events that comprise attachment of the merozoite, its re-orientation, release of the contents of the invasion-related apical organelles (the rhoptries and micronemes) followed by active propulsion of the merozoite into the cell via an actin-myosin motor. During this process, a tight junction between the parasite and red blood cell plasma membranes is formed and recent studies have identified rhoptry neck proteins, including PfRON4, that are specifically associated with the tight junction during invasion. Here, we report the structure of the gene that encodes PfRON4 and its apparent limited diversity amongst geographically diverse P. falciparum isolates. We also report that PfRON4 protein sequences elicit immunogenic responses in natural human malaria infections.  相似文献   

20.

Background

The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum EBA-175 binds its receptor sialic acids on glycophorin A when invading erythrocytes. The receptor-binding region (RII) contains two cysteine-rich domains with similar cysteine motifs (F1 and F2). Functional relationships between F1 and F2 domains and characterization of EBA-175 were studied using specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against these domains.

Methods and Findings

Five mAbs specific for F1 or F2 were generated. Three mAbs specific for F2 potently blocked binding of EBA-175 to erythrocytes, and merozoite invasion of erythrocytes (IC50 10 to 100 µg/ml IgG in growth inhibition assays). A mAb specific for F1 blocked EBA-175 binding and merozoite invasion less effectively. The difference observed between the IC50 of F1 and F2 mAbs was not due to differing association and disassociation rates as determined by surface plasmon resonance. Four of the mAbs recognized conformation-dependent epitopes within F1 or F2. Used in combination, F1 and F2 mAbs blocked the binding of native EBA-175 to erythrocytes and inhibited parasite invasion synergistically in vitro. MAb R217, the most potent, did not recognize sporozoites, 3-day hepatocyte stage parasites, nor rings, trophozoites, gametocytes, retorts, ookinetes, and oocysts but recognized 6-day hepatocyte stage parasites, and schizonts. Even though efficient at blocking binding to erythrocytes and inhibiting invasion into erythrocytes, MAb R217 did not inhibit sporozoite invasion and development in hepatocytes in vitro.

Conclusions

The role of the F1 and F2 domains in erythrocyte invasion and binding was elucidated with mAbs. These mAbs interfere with native EBA-175 binding to erythrocyte in a synergistic fashion. The stage specific expression of EBA-175 showed that the primary focus of activity was the merozoite stage. A recombinant RII protein vaccine consisting of both F1 and F2 domains that could induce synergistic activity should be optimal for induction of antibody responses that interfere with merozoite invasion of erythrocytes.  相似文献   

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