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1.
Minutes after injection into the circulation, malaria sporozoites enter hepatocytes. The speed and specificity of the invasion process suggest that it is receptor mediated. We show here that recombinant Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein (CS) binds specifically to regions of the plasma membrane of hepatocytes exposed to circulating blood in the Disse space. No binding has been detected in other organs, or even in other regions of the hepatocyte membrane. The interaction of CS with hepatocytes, as well as sporozoite invasion of HepG2 cells, is inhibited by synthetic peptides representing the evolutionarily conserved region II of CS. We conclude that region II is a sporozoite ligand for hepatocyte receptors localized to the basolateral domain of the plasma membrane. Our findings provide a rational explanation for the target cell specificity of malaria sporozoites.  相似文献   

2.
Thrombospondin related anonymous protein (TRAP) of Plasmodium falciparum contains an amino acid motif based around the sequence WSPCSVTCG which is also found in region II of the circumsporozoite (CS) proteins of different species of Plasmodium. This amino acid motif confers on the CS protein the ability to bind specifically to sulfated glycoconjugates and to hepatocytes. This suggests that the interaction of CS protein with sulfated glycoconjugates on the surface of the hepatocytes may represent the first molecular event of sporozoite invasion of liver cells. Experimental evidence indicates that TRAP is localized both on the micronemes and on the surface of P. falciparum sporozoites implying that TRAP with its putative sulfated glycoconjugate binding motif may also be involved in recognition and/or entry of hepatocytes by the sporozoite. We show here that different TRAP constructs expressed in Escherichia coli bind to sulfogalactosyl-cerebrosides (sulfatides) and to the surface of HepG2 cells. These interactions are dependent on the presence of the conserved amino acid motif WSPCSVTCG within the sequences of the constructs and are completely inhibited by several sulfated glycoconjugates as well as by suramin, a polysulfonated drug with anti-protozoan activity. Moreover, sporozoite invasion of HepG2 cells is inhibited by antisera raised against these different TRAP constructs and by the presence of low concentrations of suramin. We concluded that TRAP may be one of the parasite encoded molecules in the host-parasite interaction that results in sporozoite invasion of hepatocytes.  相似文献   

3.
Proteoglycans mediate malaria sporozoite targeting to the liver   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Malaria sporozoites are rapidly targeted to the liver where they pass through Kupffer cells and infect hepatocytes, their initial site of replication in the mammalian host. We show that sporozoites, as well as their major surface proteins, the CS protein and TRAP, recognize distinct cell type-specific surface proteoglycans from primary Kupffer cells, hepatocytes and stellate cells, but not from sinusoidal endothelia. Recombinant Plasmodium falciparum CS protein and TRAP bind to heparan sulphate on hepatocytes and both heparan and chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans on stellate cells. On Kupffer cells, CS protein predominantly recognizes chondroitin sulphate, whereas TRAP binding is glycosaminoglycan independent. Plasmodium berghei sporozoites attach to heparan sulphate on hepatocytes and stellate cells, whereas Kupffer cell recognition involves both chondroitin sulphate and heparan sulphate proteoglycans. CS protein also interacts with secreted proteoglycans from stellate cells, the major producers of extracellular matrix in the liver. In situ binding studies using frozen liver sections indicate that the majority of the CS protein binding sites are associated with these matrix proteoglycans. Our data suggest that sporozoites are first arrested in the sinusoid by binding to extracellular matrix proteoglycans and then recognize proteoglycans on the surface of Kupffer cells, which they use to traverse the sinusoidal cell barrier.  相似文献   

4.
Circumsporozoite, a predominant surface protein, is involved in invasion of liver cells by Plasmodium sporozoites, which leads to malaria. We have previously reported that the amino terminus region (amino acids 27-117) of P. falciparum circumsporozoite protein plays a critical role in the invasion of liver cells by the parasite. Here we show that invasion-blocking antibodies are induced by a polypeptide encoding these 91 amino acids, only when it is presented in the absence of the rest of the protein. This suggests that when present in the whole protein, the amino terminus remains immunologically cryptic. A single reactive epitope was identified and mapped to a stretch of 21 amino acids from position 93 to 113. The epitope is configurational in nature, since its recognition was affected by deleting as little as 3 amino acids from either end of the 21-residue peptide. Lysine 104, the only known polymorphic position in the epitope, affected its recognition by the antibodies, and its conversion to leucine in the protein led to a substantial loss of binding activity of the protein to the hepatocytes. This indicated that in the protein, the epitope serves as a binding ligand and facilitates the interaction between sporozoite and hepatic cells. When considered along with the observation that in its native state this motif is immunologically unresponsive, we suggest that hiding functional moieties of the protein from the immune system is an evasion strategy to preserve liver cell binding function and may be of importance in designing anti-sporozoite vaccines.  相似文献   

5.
Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites invade liver cells in humans and set the stage for malaria infection. Circumsporozoite protein (CSP), a predominant surface antigen on sporozoite surface, has been associated with the binding and invasion of liver cells by the sporozoites. Although CSP across the Plasmodium genus has homology and conserved structural organization, infection of a non-natural host by a species is rare. We investigated the role of CSP in providing the host specificity in P. falciparum infection. CSP from P. falciparum, P. gallinaceum, P. knowlesi, and P. yoelii species representing human, avian, simian, and rodent malaria species were recombinantly expressed, and the proteins were purified to homogeneity. The recombinant proteins were evaluated for their capacity to bind to human liver cell line HepG2 and to prevent P. falciparum sporozoites from invading these cells. The proteins showed significant differences in the binding and sporozoite invasion inhibition activity. Differences among proteins directly correlate with changes in the binding affinity to the sporozoite receptor on liver cells. P. knowlesi CSP (PkCSP) and P. yoelii CSP (PyCSP) had 4,790- and 17,800-fold lower affinity for heparin in comparison to P. falciparum CSP (PfCSP). We suggest that a difference in the binding affinity for the liver cell receptor is a mechanism involved in maintaining the host specificity by the malaria parasite.  相似文献   

6.
Native Plasmodium circumsporozoite (CS) protein, translocated by sporozoites into the cytosol of host cells, as well as recombinant CS constructs introduced into the cytoplasm by liposome fusion or transient transfection, all lead to inhibition of protein synthesis in mammalian cells. The following findings suggest that this inhibition of translation is caused by a binding of the CS protein to ribosomes. (i) The distribution of native CS protein translocated by sporozoites into the cytoplasm as well as microinjected recombinant CS protein suggests association with ribosomes. (ii) Recombinant CS protein binds to RNase-sensitive sites on rough microsomes. (iii) Synthetic peptides representing the conserved regions I and II-plus of the P.falciparum CS protein displace recombinant CS protein from rough microsomes with dissociation constants in the nanomolar range. (iv) Synthetic peptides representing region I from the P.falciparum CS protein and region II-plus from the P.falciparum, P.berghei or P.vivax CS protein inhibit in vitro translation. We propose that Plasmodium manipulates hepatocyte protein synthesis to meet the requirements of a rapidly developing schizont. Since macrophages appear to be particularly sensitive to the presence of CS protein in the cytosol, inhibition of translation may represent a novel immune evasion mechanism of Plasmodium.  相似文献   

7.
Thrombospondin-related anonymous protein, TRAP, has a critical role in the hepatocyte invasion step of Plasmodium sporozoites, the transmissible form of the parasite causing malaria. The extracellular domains of this sporozoite surface protein interact with hepatocyte surface receptors whereas its intracellular domain acts as a link to the sporozoite actomyosin motor system. Liver heparan sulfate proteoglycans have been identified as potential ligands for TRAP. Proteoglycan binding has been associated with the A- and TSR domains of TRAP. We present the solution NMR structure of the TSR domain of TRAP and a chemical shift mapping study of its heparin binding epitope. The domain has an elongated structure stabilized by an array of tryptophan and arginine residues as well as disulfide bonds. The fold is very similar to those of thrombospondin type-1 (TSP-1) and F-spondin TSRs. The heparin binding site of TRAP-TSR is located in the N-terminal half of the structure, the layered side chains forming an integral part of the site. The smallest heparin fragment capable of binding to TRAP-TSR is a tetrasaccharide.  相似文献   

8.
Plasmodium falciparum thrombospondin-related apical merozoite protein (PTRAMP) has a thrombospondin related (TSR) domain which in many proteins has been reported as a fragment involved in pathogen-host and cell-interactions. Receptor-ligand studies using eighteen non-overlapping 20-aminoacid-long synthetic peptides from this protein were carried out to determine regions involved in parasite invasion of red blood cells (RBC). Two high activity binding peptides (HABPs) were determined, 33405 (21YISSNDLTSTNLKVRNNWEH40) and 33413 (180LEGPIQFSLGKSSGAFRINY199), presenting high dissociation constants and positive cooperativity. One of the HABPs displayed a modified Plasmodium export element (PEXEL), suggesting that this protein could be involved in the merozoite cytoplasmic reticulum, parasitophorous vacuole, red blood cell (RBC) cytosol, and probably infected RBC (iRBC) membrane transport of some other molecules and nutrients. Enzymatic treatment of RBCs increased HABP 33405 binding to them whilst it decreased HABP 33413 binding. Merozoite invasion assays revealed that HABPs have around 57% ability to inhibit new RBC invasion. Circular dichroism revealed the presence of possible alpha-helical elements in both HABPs structures. RBC binding interaction specificity and the presence of a PEXEL motif make these 2 HABPs good candidates for being included in further studies to develop a new multi-antigenic, multi-stage, subunit-based, chemically-synthesised, anti-malarial vaccine.  相似文献   

9.
Malaria is transmitted through the bite of an infected mosquito, which introduces Plasmodium sporozoites into the mammalian host. Sporozoites rapidly reach the liver of the host where they are sequestered, a process probably mediated by circumsporozoite (CS) protein. Once in the liver, sporozoites migrate through several hepatocytes by breaching their plasma membranes before infecting a final hepatocyte with formation of a vacuole around the sporozoite, where development occurs into blood stage parasites. We propose that migration through several host cells activates sporozoites for ultimate productive invasion. This migration triggers sporozoite exocytosis, which is necessary for hepatocyte invasion, probably because it provides molecules, such as thrombospondin-related anonymous protein (TRAP), likely required for sporozoite invasion with the formation of a vacuole. How sporozoites migrate from the skin to the liver and invade hepatocytes remains unclear. Understanding this initial stage of malaria is crucial for the development of new approaches against the disease.  相似文献   

10.
Several sporozoite proteins have been associated with Plasmodium falciparum cell traversal and hepatocyte invasion, including the cell-traversal protein for ookinetes and sporozoites (CelTOS), and thrombospondin-related sporozoite protein (TRSP). CelTOS and TRSP amino acid sequences have been finely mapped to identify regions specifically binding to HeLa and HepG2 cells, respectively. Three high-activity binding peptides (HABPs) were found in CelTOS and one HABP was found in TRSP, all of them having high α-helical structure content. These HABPs' specific binding was sensitive to HeLa and HepG2 cells' pre-treatment with heparinase I and chondroitinase ABC. Despite their similarity at three-dimensional (3D) structural level, TRSP and TRAP HABPs located in the TSR domain did not compete for the same binding sites. CelTOS and TRSP HABPs were used as a template for designing modified sequences to then be assessed in the Aotus monkey experimental model. Antibodies directed against these modified HABPs were able to recognize both the native parasite protein by immunofluorescence assay and the recombinant protein (expressed in Escherichia coli) by Western blot and ELISA assays. The results suggested that these modified HABPs could be promising targets in designing a fully effective, antimalarial vaccine.  相似文献   

11.
Circumsporozoite (CS) proteins, which densely coat malaria (Plasmodia) sporozoites, contain an amino acid sequence that is homologous to segments in other proteins which bind specifically to sulfated glycoconjugates. The presence of this homology suggests that sporozoites and CS proteins may also bind sulfated glycoconjugates. To test this hypothesis, recombinant P. yoelii CS protein was examined for binding to sulfated glycoconjugate-Sepharoses. CS protein bound avidly to heparin-, fucoidan-, and dextran sulfate-Sepharose, but bound comparatively poorly to chondroitin sulfate A- or C-Sepharose. CS protein also bound with significantly lower affinity to a heparan sulfate biosynthesis-deficient mutant cell line compared with the wild-type line, consistent with the possibility that the protein also binds to sulfated glycoconjugates on the surfaces of cells. This possibility is consistent with the observation that CS protein binding to hepatocytes, cells invaded by sporozoites during the primary stage of malaria infection, was inhibited by fucoidan, pentosan polysulfate, and heparin. The effects of sulfated glycoconjugates on sporozoite infectivity were also determined. P. berghei sporozoites bound specifically to sulfatide (galactosyl[3-sulfate]beta 1-1ceramide), but not to comparable levels of cholesterol-3-sulfate, or several examples of neutral glycosphingolipids, gangliosides, or phospholipids. Sporozoite invasion into hepatocytes was inhibited by fucoidan, heparin, and dextran sulfate, paralleling the observed binding of CS protein to the corresponding Sepharose derivatives. These sulfated glycoconjugates blocked invasion by inhibiting an event occurring within 3 h of combining sporozoites and hepatocytes. Sporozoite infectivity in mice was significantly inhibited by dextran sulfate 500,000 and fucoidan. Taken together, these data indicate that CS proteins bind selectively to certain sulfated glycoconjugates, that sporozoite infectivity can be inhibited by such compounds, and that invasion of host hepatocytes by sporozoites may involve interactions with these types of compounds.  相似文献   

12.
Invasion of hepatocytes by Plasmodium sporozoites is a prerequisite for establishment of a malaria infection, and thus represents an attractive target for anti-malarial interventions. Still, the molecular mechanisms underlying sporozoite invasion are largely unknown. We have previously reported that the tetraspanin CD81, a known receptor for the hepatitis C virus (HCV), is required on hepatocytes for infection by sporozoites of several Plasmodium species. Here we have characterized CD81 molecular determinants required for infection of hepatocytic cells by P. yoelii sporozoites. Using CD9/CD81 chimeras, we have identified in CD81 a 21 amino acid stretch located in a domain structurally conserved in the large extracellular loop of tetraspanins, which is sufficient in an otherwise CD9 background to confer susceptibility to P. yoelii infection. By site-directed mutagenesis, we have demonstrated the key role of a solvent-exposed region around residue D137 within this domain. A mAb that requires this region for optimal binding did not block infection, in contrast to other CD81 mAbs. This study has uncovered a new functionally important region of CD81, independent of HCV E2 envelope protein binding domain, and further suggests that CD81 may not interact directly with a parasite ligand during Plasmodium infection, but instead may regulate the function of a yet unknown partner protein.  相似文献   

13.
An IgM monoclonal antibody (Mab 36) which reacts with the circumsporozoite (CS) proteins of both P. falciparum and P. berghei was isolated from Plasmodium falciparum sporozoite-immunized mice. In assays of biological activity, Mab 36 induces the CS precipitation reaction with live sporozoites and blocks the invasion of hepatoma cells by sporozoites in vitro at concentrations much lower than those observed for previously reported CS protein-specific monoclonal antibodies. Mab 36 also provided complete protection against P. berghei sporozoite challenge in mice at low doses. Linear epitope mapping revealed that the epitope specificities recognized by Mab 36 are completely encompassed by other monoclonals previously shown to be associated in vivo with protection against P. falciparum or P. berghei sporozoite infection. These results suggest that the ability to make high-affinity IgM antibody to specific CS protein repeat epitopes may be important for eliciting protection against malarial infection.  相似文献   

14.
The fine specificities of antibodies to the circumsporozoite (CS) protein of Plasmodium falciparum, present in the sera of volunteers immunized with irradiated P. falciparum sporozoites, were defined and compared to those of sera from persons living in a malaria-endemic area in West Africa. The specificity of these anti-CS antibodies was determined by ELISA, using recombinant proteins and synthetic peptides containing repeat and nonrepeat sequences of this CS protein. All 10 serum samples of the five sporozoite-immunized volunteers displayed very high antibody titers to the immunodominant repeat (NANP)n of the CS protein. However, only three of the serum samples of these vaccinees reacted with a single nonrepeat region and only at low titers. In contrast, a high percentage of sera from adults living in the malaria-endemic area who had been exposed to sporozoites, as well as liver and blood stages of P. falciparum, had high antibody levels, not only to the repeats but also to several nonrepeat regions of the CS protein. Furthermore, a number of sera from children living in this endemic area displayed appreciable levels of antibodies to the nonrepeat regions, in the absence of any antirepeat reactivity. Sera of Saimiri monkeys, which had undergone multiple blood-induced P. falciparum infections, consistently contained high titers of antibodies to several nonrepeat sequences of the CS protein, whereas only a few of these sera had low titers of antirepeat antibodies. Antibody binding sites, in nonrepeat regions, were mapped using synthetic polymers containing multiple copies of selected C-terminal sequences of the P. falciparum CS protein. The binding to sporozoites of antibodies to nonrepeat regions of the CS protein was determined. The basis for the differences in antibody binding sites of sera from persons immunized with irradiated sporozoites, compared to those from an endemic area, is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Thrombospondin repeat (TSR)-like domains are structures involved with cell adhesion. Plasmodium falciparum proteins containing TSR domains play crucial roles in parasite development. In particular, the preerythrocytic P. falciparum circumsporozoite protein is involved in hepatocyte invasion. The importance of these domains in two other malaria proteins, the merozoite-specific thrombospondin-related anonymous protein (MTRAP) and the thrombospondin-related apical membrane protein (PTRAMP), were assessed using near-full-length recombinant proteins composed of the extracellular domains produced in Escherichia coli. MTRAP is thought to be released from invasive organelles identified as micronemes during merozoite invasion to mediate motility and host cell invasion through an interaction with aldolase, an actin binding protein involved in the moving junction. PTRAMP function remains unknown. In this study, the conformation of recombinant MTRAP (rMTRAP) appeared to be a highly extended protein (2 nm by 33 nm, width by length, respectively), whereas rPTRAMP had a less extended structure. Using an erythrocyte binding assay, rMTRAP but not rPTRAMP bound human erythrocytes; rMTRAP binding was mediated through the TSR domain. MTRAP- and in general PTRAMP-specific antibodies failed to inhibit P. falciparum development in vitro. Altogether, MTRAP is a highly extended bifunctional protein that binds to an erythrocyte receptor and the merozoite motor.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Gonzalez-Ceron, L., Rodriguez, M. H., Wirtz, R. A., Sina, B. J., Palomeque, O. L., Nettel, J. A., and Tsutsumi, V. 1998.Plasmodium vivax:A monoclonal antibody recognizes a circumsporozoite protein precursor on the sporozoite surface.Experimental Parasitology90, 203–211. The major surface circumsporozoite (CS) proteins are known to play a role in malaria sporozoite development and invasion of invertebrate and vertebrate host cells.Plasmodium vivaxCS protein processing during mosquito midgut oocyst and salivary gland sporozoite development was studied using monoclonal antibodies which recognize different CS protein epitopes. Monoclonal antibodies which react with the CS amino acid repeat sequences by ELISA recognized a 50-kDa precursor protein in immature oocyst and additional 47- and 42-kDa proteins in older oocysts. A 42-kDa CS protein was detected after initial sporozoite invasion of mosquito salivary glands and an additional 50-kDa precursor CS protein observed later in infected salivary glands. These data confirm previous results with otherPlasmodiumspecies, in which more CS protein precursors were detected in oocysts than in salivary gland sporozoites. A monoclonal antibody (PvPCS) was characterized which reacts with an epitope found only in the 50-kDa precursor CS protein. PvPCS reacted with allP. vivaxsporozoite strains tested by indirect immunofluorescent assay, homogeneously staining the sporozoite periphery with much lower intensity than that produced by anti-CS repeat antibodies. Immunoelectron microscopy using PvPCS showed that the CS protein precursor was associated with peripheral cytoplasmic vacuoles and membranes of sporoblast and budding sporozoites in development oocysts. In salivary gland sporozoites, the CS protein precursor was primarily associated with micronemes and sporozoite membranes. Our results suggest that the 50-kDa CS protein precursor is synthesized intracellularly and secreted on the membrane surface, where it is proteolytically processed to form the 42-kDa mature CS protein. These data indicate that differences in CS protein processing in oocyst and salivary gland sporozoites development may occur.  相似文献   

18.
Anthrax toxin consists of three separate proteins produced by Bacillus anthracis: protective antigen (PA), lethal factor (LF), and edema factor (EF). Previous work showed that the process by which these proteins damage eukaryotic cells begins with binding of PA (83 kDa) to cell surface receptors. PA is then cleaved by a cell surface protease so as to expose a high-affinity binding site for LF or EF on the COOH-terminal, receptor-bound, 63-kilodalton fragment. In this report we more closely define a region of PA involved in receptor binding. The gene encoding PA was mutagenized so as to delete 3, 5, 7, 12, or 14 amino acids from the carboxyl terminus of the protein, and the truncated PA variants were purified from Bacillus subtilis or Escherichia coli. Deletion of 3, 5, or 7 amino acids reduced the binding of PA to cells and the subsequent toxicity of the PA.LF complex to J774A.1 cells and also the ability to cause EF binding to cells. Deletion of 12 or 14 amino acids completely eliminated all these activities. These results show that the carboxy terminus comprises or is part of the receptor-binding domain of PA.  相似文献   

19.
Plasmodium sporozoites develop within oocysts residing in the mosquito midgut. Mature sporozoites exit the oocysts, enter the hemolymph, and invade the salivary glands. The circumsporozoite (CS) protein is the major surface protein of salivary gland and oocyst sporozoites. It is also found on the oocyst plasma membrane and on the inner surface of the oocyst capsule. CS protein contains a conserved motif of positively charged amino acids: region II-plus, which has been implicated in the initial stages of sporozoite invasion of hepatocytes. We investigated the function of region II-plus by generating mutant parasites in which the region had been substituted with alanines. Mutant parasites produced normal numbers of sporozoites in the oocysts, but the sporozoites were unable to exit the oocysts. In in vitro as well, there was a profound delay, upon trypsin treatment, in the release of mutant sporozoites from oocysts. We conclude that the exit of sporozoites from oocysts is an active process that involves the region II-plus of CS protein. In addition, the mutant sporozoites were not infective to young rats. These findings provide a new target for developing reagents that interfere with the transmission of malaria.  相似文献   

20.
Malaria sporozoites have the unique capacity to invade two entirely different types of target cell in the mosquito vector and the vertebrate host during the course of the parasite's life cycle. Although little is known about the specific interaction of the sporozoite with its target cells, two sporozoite proteins, circumsporozoite (CS) and thrombospondin-related adhesive protein (TRAP), have been shown to play important roles in the invasion of both cell types. CS protein is a multifunctional protein involved in sporogony, invasion of the salivary glands, the specific arrest of sporozoites in the liver sinusoid, gliding motility of the sporozoite, and hepatocyte recognition and entry. TRAP has been shown to be critical for sporozoite infection of the mosquito salivary glands and liver cells, and is essential for sporozoite gliding motility. This review will focus on the involvement of these molecules in sporozoite motility and the invasion of host cells.  相似文献   

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