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1.
Apicoplasts are vestigial plastids in apicomplexan parasites like Plasmodium, the causative agent of malaria. Apicomplexan parasites are dependant on their apicoplasts for synthesis of various molecules that they are unable to scavenge in sufficient quantity from their host, which makes apicoplasts attractive drug targets. Proteins known as plastid phosphate translocators (pPTs) are embedded in the outer apicoplast membrane and are responsible for the import of carbon, energy and reducing power to drive anabolic synthesis in the organelle. We investigated how a pPT is targeted into the outer apicoplast membrane of the human malaria parasite P. falciparum. We showed that a transmembrane domain is likely to act as a recessed signal anchor to direct the protein into the endomembrane system, and that a tyrosine in the cytosolic N-terminus of the protein is essential for targeting, but one or more, as yet unidentified, factors are also essential to direct the protein into the outer apicoplast membrane. 相似文献
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Xue Yan Yam Cecilia Birago Federica Fratini Francesco Di Girolamo Carla Raggi Massimo Sargiacomo Angela Bachi Laurence Berry Gamou Fall Chiara Currà Elisabetta Pizzi Catherine Braun Breton Marta Ponzi 《Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP》2013,12(12):3948-3961
Intracellular pathogens contribute to a significant proportion of infectious diseases worldwide. The successful strategy of evading the immune system by hiding inside host cells is common to all the microorganism classes, which exploit membrane microdomains, enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids, to invade and colonize the host cell. These assemblies, with distinct biochemical properties, can be isolated by means of flotation in sucrose density gradient centrifugation because they are insoluble in nonionic detergents at low temperature. We analyzed the protein and lipid contents of detergent-resistant membranes from erythrocytes infected by Plasmodium falciparum, the most deadly human malaria parasite. Proteins associated with membrane microdomains of trophic parasite blood stages (trophozoites) include an abundance of chaperones, molecules involved in vesicular trafficking, and enzymes implicated in host hemoglobin degradation. About 60% of the identified proteins contain a predicted localization signal suggesting a role of membrane microdomains in protein sorting/trafficking.To validate our proteomic data, we raised antibodies against six Plasmodium proteins not characterized previously. All the selected candidates were recovered in floating low-density fractions after density gradient centrifugation. The analyzed proteins localized either to internal organelles, such as the mitochondrion and the endoplasmic reticulum, or to exported membrane structures, the parasitophorous vacuole membrane and Maurer''s clefts, implicated in targeting parasite proteins to the host erythrocyte cytosol or surface. The relative abundance of cholesterol and phospholipid species varies in gradient fractions containing detergent-resistant membranes, suggesting heterogeneity in the lipid composition of the isolated microdomain population. This study is the first report showing the presence of cholesterol-rich microdomains with distinct properties and subcellular localization in trophic stages of Plasmodium falciparum.Plasmodium falciparum, the most deadly agent of human malaria, caused around 216 million infections and 655,000 deaths in 2010. The complex parasite life cycle involves the development in a mosquito vector of the Anopheles genus and eventual migration to a human host. In this host, asymptomatic multiplication in the liver cells is followed by parasite release into the bloodstream and erythrocyte invasion. Inside the erythrocytes, parasites grow (trophozoite stage) and multiply asexually (schizont stage), developing into highly specialized invasive forms (merozoites). A fraction of parasites differentiate into gametocytes, the gamete precursors necessary to complete the transmission cycle. Parasite blood stages, responsible for malaria pathogenesis and transmission, actively remodel the host erythrocyte, generating novel membrane compartments to sustain the export and sorting of proteins to the host cell cytosol, membrane skeleton, and plasma membrane. The parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM),1 which surrounds the parasite throughout the erythrocytic cycle, is the site where exported proteins are translocated into the erythrocyte cytosol (1, 2). Membrane-bound structures of parasite origin, the so-called Maurer''s clefts (MCs) (3, 4), form functionally independent compartments at the red blood cell (RBC) periphery and mediate the sorting/assembly of virulence factors en route to the host cell surface (5). In addition, populations of different vesicles (25 and 80 nm) were identified in the RBC cytosol, suggesting the presence of vesicular mediated trafficking for the delivery of cargo to different destinations (6).Membranes are important sites for cellular signaling events, and many proteins with therapeutic potential localize in these cellular compartments (7, 8). Membrane microdomains enriched in sphingolipids and cholesterol, also referred to as lipid rafts, have been extensively studied in different cell types and gained particular interest for their roles in infection and pathogenesis (8, 9). These assemblies are small and dynamic and can be stabilized to form larger microdomains implicated in a wide range of fundamental cellular processes, which vary depending on cell type (10). Sphingolipids exhibit strong lateral cohesion, generating tightly packed regions in the membrane bilayer, and cholesterol acts as a spacer present in both membrane leaflets generating stable, liquid-ordered phase domains in the membrane bilayer (11). Distinct biochemical properties render these membrane assemblies insoluble in nonionic detergents at low temperature, allowing for their enrichment as detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs). Proteins with DRM-raft affinity include glycosylphosphatidyl inositol (GPI)-anchored proteins and acylated, myristoylated, and palmitoylated proteins (11). DRM rafts also restrict free diffusion of membrane proteins, thereby directing the trafficking of proteins and lipids to and from cellular compartments. Because of their endocytic and receptor clustering capacity, an increasing number of pathogens, including Plasmodium falciparum, utilize them when interacting with their target cells for invasion (9, 12).Even though cholesterol-rich membrane microdomains are implicated in fundamental processes in the parasite life cycle, Plasmodium is unable to synthesize sterols and depends entirely on hosts for its cholesterol supply. During merozoite invasion, lipid and protein components of the erythrocyte rafts are selectively recruited and incorporated into the nascent PVM (13, 14). Plasmodium liver stages utilize cholesterol internalized by low-density lipoprotein and synthesized by hepatocytes (15).To shed light on the organization and dynamics of these assemblies during parasite development inside the infected cell, we identified and validated the DRM-raft proteome of the P. falciparum trophozoite/early schizont. Detected proteins only partially overlap with DRM components of the P. falciparum late schizonts (16, 17) or the mixed blood stages of the rodent malaria agent P. berghei (18). Immunolocalization of selected DRM-associated proteins indicated that these assemblies may reside in both exported compartments (PVM, MCs) and intracellular membranes/organelles. The analysis of DRM lipids suggested that distinct microdomains exist in the infected erythrocyte that differ in their relative abundance of cholesterol and phospholipids. 相似文献
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Nguyen Duc Quang Phan Thi Phuong Hoa Mai Sy Tuan Nguyen Xuan Viet Amadu Jalloh Hiroyuki Matsuoka 《Biochemical genetics》2009,47(5-6):370-383
The patterns of molecular evolution of the most diverse region of the apical membrane antigen 1 (AMA1) gene in Plasmodium falciparum from a Vietnamese subpopulation (Bao Loc) were investigated. Within the Bao Loc population, the sequenced gene region showed relatively high allelic and nucleotide diversity (0.985 and 0.02694, respectively). Further, the level of population recombination was substantial, resulting in a significant decay of linkage disequilibrium along the gene region. The results suggest that AMA1 is a useful genetic marker for studying the relationships between adaptation of parasite populations (to the human host immune system) and malaria epidemiology. 相似文献
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Paul A. Sigala Jan R. Crowley Samantha Hsieh Jeffrey P. Henderson Daniel E. Goldberg 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2012,287(45):37793-37807
Malaria parasites generate vast quantities of heme during blood stage infection via hemoglobin digestion and limited de novo biosynthesis, but it remains unclear if parasites metabolize heme for utilization or disposal. Recent in vitro experiments with a heme oxygenase (HO)-like protein from Plasmodium falciparum suggested that parasites may enzymatically degrade some heme to the canonical HO product, biliverdin (BV), or its downstream metabolite, bilirubin (BR). To directly test for BV and BR production by P. falciparum parasites, we DMSO-extracted equal numbers of infected and uninfected erythrocytes and developed a sensitive LC-MS/MS assay to quantify these tetrapyrroles. We found comparable low levels of BV and BR in both samples, suggesting the absence of HO activity in parasites. We further tested live parasites by targeted expression of a fluorescent BV-binding protein within the parasite cytosol, mitochondrion, and plant-like plastid. This probe could detect exogenously added BV but gave no signal indicative of endogenous BV production within parasites. Finally, we recombinantly expressed and tested the proposed heme degrading activity of the HO-like protein, PfHO. Although PfHO bound heme and protoporphyrin IX with modest affinity, it did not catalyze heme degradation in vivo within bacteria or in vitro in UV absorbance and HPLC assays. These observations are consistent with PfHO''s lack of a heme-coordinating His residue and suggest an alternative function within parasites. We conclude that P. falciparum parasites lack a canonical HO pathway for heme degradation and thus rely fully on alternative mechanisms for heme detoxification and iron acquisition during blood stage infection. 相似文献
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Thuvaraka Thavayogarajah Preetish Gangopadhyay Stefan Rahlfs Katja Becker Klaus Lingelbach Jude M. Przyborski Anthony A. Holder 《PloS one》2015,10(4)
Plasmodium falciparum invades human red blood cells, residing in a parasitophorous vacuole (PV), with a parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM) separating the PV from the host cell cytoplasm. Here we have investigated the role of N-myristoylation and two other N-terminal motifs, a cysteine potential S-palmitoylation site and a stretch of basic residues, as the driving force for protein targeting to the parasite plasma membrane (PPM) and subsequent translocation across this membrane. Plasmodium falciparum adenylate kinase 2 (Pf AK2) contains these three motifs, and was previously proposed to be targeted beyond the parasite to the PVM, despite the absence of a signal peptide for entry into the classical secretory pathway. Biochemical and microscopy analyses of PfAK2 variants tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP) showed that these three motifs are involved in targeting the protein to the PPM and translocation across the PPM to the PV. It was shown that the N-terminal 37 amino acids of PfAK2 alone are sufficient to target and translocate GFP across the PPM. As a control we examined the N-myristoylated P. falciparum ADP-ribosylation factor 1 (PfARF1). PfARF1 was found to co-localise with a Golgi marker. To determine whether or not the putative palmitoylation and the cluster of lysine residues from the N-terminus of PfAK2 would modulate the subcellular localization of PfARF1, a chimeric fusion protein containing the N-terminus of PfARF1 and the two additional PfAK2 motifs was analysed. This chimeric protein was targeted to the PPM, but not translocated across the membrane into the PV, indicating that other features of the N-terminus of PfAK2 also play a role in the secretion process. 相似文献
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Roselani I. Henry Simon A. Cobbold Richard J. W. Allen Asif Khan Rhys Hayward Adele M. Lehane Patrick G. Bray Susan M. Howitt Giancarlo A. Biagini Kevin J. Saliba Kiaran Kirk 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2010,285(24):18615-18626
The intraerythrocytic malaria parasite exerts tight control over its ionic composition. In this study, a combination of fluorescent ion indicators and 36Cl− flux measurements was used to investigate the transport of Cl− and the Cl−-dependent transport of “H+-equivalents” in mature (trophozoite stage) parasites, isolated from their host erythrocytes. Removal of extracellular Cl−, resulting in an outward [Cl−] gradient, gave rise to a cytosolic alkalinization (i.e. a net efflux of H+-equivalents). This was reversed on restoration of extracellular Cl−. The flux of H+-equivalents was inhibited by 4,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid and, when measured in ATP-depleted parasites, showed a pronounced dependence on the pH of the parasite cytosol; the flux was low at cytosolic pH values < 7.2 but increased steeply with cytosolic pH at values > 7.2. 36Cl− influx measurements revealed the presence of a Cl− uptake mechanism with characteristics similar to those of the Cl−-dependent H+-equivalent flux. The intracellular concentration of Cl− in the parasite was estimated to be ∼48 mm in situ. The data are consistent with the intraerythrocytic parasite having in its plasma membrane a 4,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid-sensitive transporter that, under physiological conditions, imports Cl− together with H+-equivalents, resulting in an intracellular Cl− concentration well above that which would occur if Cl− ions were distributed passively in accordance with the parasite''s large, inwardly negative membrane potential. 相似文献
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Andrew H. Lee Lorraine S. Symington David A. Fidock 《Microbiology and molecular biology reviews》2014,78(3):469-486
SUMMARY
Research into the complex genetic underpinnings of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is entering a new era with the arrival of site-specific genome engineering. Previously restricted only to model systems but now expanded to most laboratory organisms, and even to humans for experimental gene therapy studies, this technology allows researchers to rapidly generate previously unattainable genetic modifications. This technological advance is dependent on DNA double-strand break repair (DSBR), specifically homologous recombination in the case of Plasmodium. Our understanding of DSBR in malaria parasites, however, is based largely on assumptions and knowledge taken from other model systems, which do not always hold true in Plasmodium. Here we describe the causes of double-strand breaks, the mechanisms of DSBR, and the differences between model systems and P. falciparum. These mechanisms drive basic parasite functions, such as meiosis, antigen diversification, and copy number variation, and allow the parasite to continually evolve in the contexts of host immune pressure and drug selection. Finally, we discuss the new technologies that leverage DSBR mechanisms to accelerate genetic investigations into this global infectious pathogen. 相似文献12.
Pattamawan Chimma Christian Roussilhon Panudda Sratongno Ronnatrai Ruangveerayuth Kovit Pattanapanyasat Jean-Louis Pérignon David J. Roberts Pierre Druilhe 《PLoS pathogens》2009,5(10)
Monocyte (MO) subpopulations display distinct phenotypes and functions which can drastically change during inflammatory states. We hypothesized that discrete MO subpopulations are induced during malaria infection and associated with anti-parasitic activity. We characterized the phenotype of blood MO from healthy malaria-exposed individuals and that of patients with acute uncomplicated malaria by flow cytometry. In addition, MO defense function was evaluated by an in vitro antibody dependent cellular inhibition (ADCI) assay. At the time of admission, the percentages and absolute numbers of CD16+ MO, and CCR2+CX3CR1+ MO, were high in a majority of patients. Remarkably, expression of CCR2 and CX3CR1 on the CD14high (hi) MO subset defined two subgroups of patients that also differed significantly in their functional ability to limit the parasite growth, through the ADCI mechanism. In the group of patients with the highest percentages and absolute numbers of CD14hiCCR2+CX3CR1+ MO and the highest mean levels of ADCI activity, blood parasitemias were lower (0.14±0.34%) than in the second group (1.30±3.34%; p = 0.0053). Data showed that, during a malaria attack, some patients'' MO can exert a strong ADCI activity. These results bring new insight into the complex relationships between the phenotype and the functional activity of blood MO from patients and healthy malaria-exposed individuals and suggest discrete MO subpopulations are induced during malaria infection and are associated with anti-parasitic activity. 相似文献
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Ronald Perraut Charlotte Joos Cheikh Sokhna Hannah E. J. Polson Jean-Fran?ois Trape Adama Tall Laurence Marrama Odile Mercereau-Puijalon Vincent Richard Shirley Longacre 《PloS one》2014,9(7)
Background
Plasmodium falciparum merozoite surface protein 5 (PfMSP5) is an attractive blood stage vaccine candidate because it is both exposed to the immune system and well conserved. To evaluate its interest, we investigated the association of anti-PfMSP5 IgG levels, in the context of responses to two other conserved Ags PfMSP1p19 and R23, with protection from clinical episodes of malaria in cross-sectional prospective studies in two different transmission settings.Methods
Ndiop (mesoendemic) and Dielmo (holoendemic) are two Senegalese villages participating in an on-going long-term observational study of natural immunity to malaria. Blood samples were taken before the transmission season (Ndiop) or before peak transmission (Dielmo) and active clinical surveillance was carried out during the ensuing 5.5-month follow-up. IgG responses to recombinant PfMSP5, PfMSP1p19 and R23 were quantified by ELISA in samples from surveys carried out in Dielmo (186 subjects) and Ndiop (221 subjects) in 2002, and Ndiop in 2000 (204 subjects). In addition, 236 sera from the Dielmo and Ndiop-2002 surveys were analyzed for relationships between the magnitude of anti-PfMSP5 response and neutrophil antibody dependent respiratory burst (ADRB) activity.Results
Anti-PfMSP5 antibodies predominantly IgG1 were detected in 60–74% of villagers, with generally higher levels in older age groups. PfMSP5 IgG responses were relatively stable for Ndiop subjects sampled both in 2000 and 2002. ADRB activity correlated with age and anti-PfMSP5 IgG levels. Importantly, PfMSP5 antibody levels were significantly associated with reduced incidence of clinical malaria in all three cohorts. Inclusion of IgG to PfMSP1p19 in the poisson regression model did not substantially modify results.Conclusion
These results indicate that MSP5 is recognized by naturally acquired Ab. The large seroprevalence and association with protection against clinical malaria in two settings with differing transmission conditions and stability over time demonstrated in Ndiop argue for further evaluation of baculovirus PfMSP5 as a vaccine candidate. 相似文献14.
Autophagy is a membrane-mediated degradation process, which is governed by sequential functions of Atg proteins. Although Atg proteins are highly conserved in eukaryotes, protozoa possess only a partial set of Atg proteins. Nonetheless, almost all protozoa have the complete factors belonging to the Atg8 conjugation system, namely, Atg3, Atg4, Atg7, and Atg8. Here, we report the biochemical properties and subcellular localization of the Atg8 protein of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum (PfAtg8). PfAtg8 is expressed during intra-erythrocytic development and associates with membranes likely as a lipid-conjugated form. Fluorescence microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy show that PfAtg8 localizes to the apicoplast, a four membrane-bound non-photosynthetic plastid. Autophagosome-like structures are not observed in the erythrocytic stages. These data suggest that, although Plasmodium parasites have lost most Atg proteins during evolution, they use the Atg8 conjugation system for the unique organelle, the apicoplast. 相似文献
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Natalie J. Spillman Richard J.W. Allen Case W. McNamara Bryan K.S. Yeung Elizabeth A. Winzeler Thierry T. Diagana Kiaran Kirk 《Cell host & microbe》2013,13(2):227-237
Highlights? The intraerythrocytic malaria parasite extrudes Na+ via a Na+-ATPase ? Parasite Na+ homeostasis is disrupted by the antimalarial spiroindolones ? Mutations in PfATP4 confer resistance to Na+ disruption by the spiroindolones ? PfATP4 is postulated to be a Na+ efflux ATPase and a target of the spiroindolones 相似文献
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Structure of the Plasmodium falciparum Circumsporozoite Protein, a Leading Malaria Vaccine Candidate
Matthew L. Plassmeyer Karine Reiter Richard L. Shimp Jr. Svetlana Kotova Paul D. Smith Darrell E. Hurt Brent House Xiaoyan Zou Yanling Zhang Merrit Hickman Onyinyechukwu Uchime Raul Herrera Vu Nguyen Jacqueline Glen Jacob Lebowitz Albert J. Jin Louis H. Miller Nicholas J. MacDonald Yimin Wu David L. Narum 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(39):26951-26963
The Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein (CSP) is critical for sporozoite function and invasion of hepatocytes. Given its critical nature, a phase III human CSP malaria vaccine trial is ongoing. The CSP is composed of three regions as follows: an N terminus that binds heparin sulfate proteoglycans, a four amino acid repeat region (NANP), and a C terminus that contains a thrombospondin-like type I repeat (TSR) domain. Despite the importance of CSP, little is known about its structure. Therefore, recombinant forms of CSP were produced by expression in both Escherichia coli (Ec) and then refolded (EcCSP) or in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris (PpCSP) for structural analyses. To analyze the TSR domain of recombinant CSP, conformation-dependent monoclonal antibodies that recognized unfixed P. falciparum sporozoites and inhibited sporozoite invasion of HepG2 cells in vitro were identified. These monoclonal antibodies recognized all recombinant CSPs, indicating the recombinant CSPs contain a properly folded TSR domain structure. Characterization of both EcCSP and PpCSP by dynamic light scattering and velocity sedimentation demonstrated that both forms of CSP appeared as highly extended proteins (Rh 4.2 and 4.58 nm, respectively). Furthermore, high resolution atomic force microscopy revealed flexible, rod-like structures with a ribbon-like appearance. Using this information, we modeled the NANP repeat and TSR domain of CSP. Consistent with the biochemical and biophysical results, the repeat region formed a rod-like structure about 21–25 nm in length and 1.5 nm in width. Thus native CSP appears as a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored, flexible rod-like protein on the sporozoite surface.Malaria caused by Plasmodium falciparum is a serious global health issue, resulting in an estimated 1.5 million deaths annually, primarily among infants and young children. Ongoing multifaceted global intervention strategies to control malaria include drug treatment, insecticide usage, bed-net use, and vaccine development. However, parasite and mosquito control measures have met with limited success resulting from an increased drug and insecticide resistance within the Plasmodia and mosquito populations, respectively. Vaccine development represents an encouraging approach given that previous animal and human studies using irradiated sporozoites demonstrated the feasibility of producing an efficacious vaccine (1–3). Although the exact immunologic correlates of protection remain elusive, an abundance of evidence indicates that protection against liver stage parasites is complex, involving multiple immune mechanisms (4–11).To date, the majority of the pre-erythrocytic stage vaccine development has focused on the circumsporozoite protein (CSP),2 the predominant surface antigen on sporozoites. CSP can be segmented into three regions as follows: the N-terminal region containing region I; the central repeat region; and the C-terminal region containing the thrombospondin-like type I repeat (TSR). Initial CSP vaccine development focused on the central repeat region that contains the immunodominant B cell epitope (12). However, vaccine constructs quickly evolved to incorporate both the central repeat region containing the B cell epitopes and the C terminus containing the TSR domain, T cell epitopes, and B cell epitopes (13, 14). Currently, the most advanced and moderately effective malaria vaccine, RTS,S, is composed of a portion of the central repeat and the C-terminal regions linked to the hepatitis B surface antigen (15). However, recent studies have highlighted the physiological importance of the N-terminal region (16–19). Rathore et al. (19) not only demonstrated the role of the N-terminal region in liver cell attachment but also identified along with Ancsin and Kisilevsky (16) an epitope within the N-terminal region that interacted with liver cells through heparin sulfate (18). Moreover, this epitope was not only found to be immunogenic but the resulting antibodies were determined to be inhibitory in a sporozoite invasion assay (18). Peptides corresponding to the N-terminal region (PpCS-(22–110) and PpCS-(65–110)) were also recognized by sera obtained from individuals living in malaria-endemic regions (17).To better understand the structure of CSP and to produce good quality recombinant protein for human vaccine-directed studies, we generated full-length and near full-length recombinant CSP. We examined two expression systems, Escherichia coli and Pichia pastoris, to determine their feasibility to generate CSP. To assist the characterization of the rCSPs, we generated a panel of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that were characterized biologically prior to being used to examine the rCSPs. Additionally, each of the rCSP molecules was extensively biochemically and biophysically characterized. The results collated together have enabled the molecular modeling of CSP as a long flexible, rod-like protein. 相似文献
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Invasion of a red blood cell by Plasmodium falciparum merozoites is an essential step in the malaria lifecycle. Several of the proteins involved in this process are stored in the apical complex of the merozoite, a structure containing secretory organelles that are released at specific times during invasion. The molecular players involved in erythrocyte invasion thus represent potential key targets for both therapeutic and vaccine-based strategies to block parasite development. In our quest to identify and characterize new effectors of invasion, we investigated the P. falciparum homologue of a P. berghei protein putatively localized to the rhoptries, the Putative rhoptry protein 2 (PbPRP2). We show that in P. falciparum, the protein colocalizes extensively with the Golgi apparatus across the asexual erythrocytic cycle. Furthermore, imaging of merozoites caught at different times during invasion show that PfPRP2 is not secreted during the process instead staying associated with the Golgi apparatus. Our evidence therefore suggests that PfPRP2 is a Golgi protein and that it is likely not a direct effector in the process of merozoite invasion. 相似文献
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Sebastian Fernandez-Pol Zdenek Slouka Souvik Bhattacharjee Yana Fedotova Stefan Freed Xiuli An Anthony A. Holder Estela Campanella Philip S. Low Narla Mohandas Kasturi Haldar 《Eukaryotic cell》2013,12(9):1179-1191
Eukaryotic parasites of the genus Plasmodium cause malaria by invading and developing within host erythrocytes. Here, we demonstrate that PfShelph2, a gene product of Plasmodium falciparum that belongs to the Shewanella-like phosphatase (Shelph) subfamily, selectively hydrolyzes phosphotyrosine, as shown for other previously studied Shelph family members. In the extracellular merozoite stage, PfShelph2 localizes to vesicles that appear to be distinct from those of rhoptry, dense granule, or microneme organelles. During invasion, PfShelph2 is released from these vesicles and exported to the host erythrocyte. In vitro, PfShelph2 shows tyrosine phosphatase activity against the host erythrocyte protein Band 3, which is the most abundant tyrosine-phosphorylated species of the erythrocyte. During P. falciparum invasion, Band 3 undergoes dynamic and rapid clearance from the invasion junction within 1 to 2 s of parasite attachment to the erythrocyte. Release of Pfshelph2 occurs after clearance of Band 3 from the parasite-host cell interface and when the parasite is nearly or completely enclosed in the nascent vacuole. We propose a model in which the phosphatase modifies Band 3 in time to restore its interaction with the cytoskeleton and thus reestablishes the erythrocyte cytoskeletal network at the end of the invasion process. 相似文献
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Biochemistry (Moscow) - Specific adhesion (sequestration) of Plasmodium falciparum parasite-infected erythrocytes (IEs) in deep vascular beds can cause severe complications resulting in death. This... 相似文献