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1.
Plasmodial lactate dehydrogenase, key enzyme of anaerobic glycolysis, has been shown to be a potential immunodiagnostic marker as well as a novel target for chemotherapy. We have cloned, overexpressed and immunochemically characterized the recombinant lactate dehydrogenase of Plasmodium knowlesi, the fifth human malaria parasite. The P. knowlesi lactate dehydrogenase (PkLDH) gene was PCR amplified and 0.9 kb PCR product was cloned into pGEM-T Easy vector. Sequencing and BLAST analysis revealed open reading frame of 316 amino acids of PkLDH showing 96.8% homology with Plasmodium vivax LDH and around 90% with Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium malariae and Plasmodium ovale LDHs. The PkLDH gene was subcloned into pGEX-6P1 expression vector and the SDS-PAGE analysis revealed that about 70% of fusion protein was present in the soluble fraction. The fusion protein was cleaved with PreScission protease and recombinant PkLDH (34 kDa) was affinity purified to homogeneity. The purified PkLDH exhibited high reactivity with polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies against plasmodial LDH. The polyclonal antibody produced against purified recombinant PkLDH in rabbits showed high ELISA reactivity with both native and recombinant PkLDH and could detect parasite LDH in malaria infected blood samples by sandwich ELISA. The purified recombinant PkLDH can be used to produce P. knowlesi specific monoclonal antibodies for specific diagnosis of P. knowlesi infection in humans.  相似文献   

2.
Codon usage in Plasmodium vivax nuclear genes was analysed and compared with that in Plasmodium falciparum nuclear genes. Preferred codons were determined for P. vivax. Unlike P. falciparum, P. vivax genes are about 15% less A+T rich in the coding regions, with no obvious A+T bias at the third position of the codons. The amino-acid composition of P. vivax gene products is also different from that of P. falciparum. These results provide valuable information to facilitate gene cloning as well as expression and transfection studies for P. vivax.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Malaria caused by Plasmodium vivax is a major cause of global morbidity and, in rare cases, mortality. Lactate dehydrogenase is an essential Plasmodium protein and, therefore, a potential antimalarial drug target. Ideally, drugs directed against this target would be effective against both major species of Plasmodium, P. falciparum and P. vivax. In this study, the crystal structure of the lactate dehydrogenase protein from P. vivax has been solved and is compared to the equivalent structure from the P. falciparum enzyme. The active sites and cofactor binding pockets of both enzymes are found to be highly similar and differentiate these enzymes from their human counterparts. These structures suggest effective inhibition of both enzymes should be readily achievable with a common inhibitor. The crystal structures of both enzymes have also been solved in complex with the synthetic cofactor APADH. The unusual cofactor binding site in these Plasmodium enzymes is found to readily accommodate both NADH and APADH, explaining why the Plasmodium enzymes retain enzymatic activity in the presence of this synthetic cofactor.  相似文献   

5.
Increased drug resistance to anti-malarials highlights the need for the development of new therapeutics for the treatment of malaria. To this end, the lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) gene was cloned and sequenced from genomic DNA of Plasmodium vivax ( PvLDH) Belem strain. The 316 amino acid protein-coding region of the PvLDH gene was inserted into the prokaryotic expression vector pKK223-3 and a 34 kDa protein with LDH activity was expressed in E. coli. Structural differences between human LDHs and PfLDH make the latter an attractive target for inhibitors leading to novel anti-malarial drugs. The sequence similarity between PvLDH and PfLDH (90% residue identity and no insertions or deletions) indicate that the same approach could be applied to Plasmodium vivax, the most common human malaria parasite in the world.  相似文献   

6.
Alternative, non-microscopic methods for the diagnosis of malaria have recently become available. Among these, rapid dipstick methods stand out. One such test, OptiMAL(R), is based on the immunochromatographic detection of Plasmodium lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) and has the capacity to detect and distinguish infections caused by P. falciparum and Plasmodium sp. This capacity is particularly important in countries where different species of Plasmodium co-exist. In this study we evaluated the performance of OptiMAL(R) in an urban referral center for malaria diagnosis. Two sets of patients were included: one (n = 112) having predetermined infections with P. falciparum or P. vivax and individuals with negative blood smears; and another consisting of all eligible consecutive patients (n = 80) consulting for diagnosis at the referral center during one month. The overall diagnostic efficiency of OptiMAL(R) for both sets of patients was 96.9%. Efficiency was higher for P. vivax (98.1%) than for P. falciparum (94.9%). These results corroborate the diagnostic utility of OptiMAL(R) in settings where P. vivax and P. falciparum co-exist and support its implementation where microscopic diagnosis is unavailable and in circumstances that exceed the capacity of the local microscopic diagnosis facility.  相似文献   

7.
Finding a highly sensitive diagnostic technique for malaria has challenged scientists for the last century. In the present study, we identified versatile single-strand DNA aptamers for Plasmodium lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH), a biomarker for malaria, via the Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment (SELEX). The pLDH aptamers selectively bound to the target proteins with high sensitivity (K(d)=16.8-49.6 nM). The selected aptamers were characterized using an electrophoretic mobility shift assay, a quartz crystal microbalance, a fluorescence assay, and circular dichroism spectroscopy. We also designed a simple aptasensor using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; both Plasmodium vivax LDH and Plasmodium falciparum LDH were selectively detected with a detection limit of 1 pM. Furthermore, the pLDH aptasensor clearly distinguished between malaria-positive blood samples of two major species (P. vivax and P. falciparum) and a negative control, indicating that it may be a useful tool for the diagnosis, monitoring, and surveillance of malaria.  相似文献   

8.
Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum are the two prevalent human malaria species. A Colombian P. vivax wild strain has been adapted in Aotus nancymaae monkeys for use in further biological and immunological studies. We present data validating a real-time PCR assay quantifying P. vivax parasitemia, using the small subunit ribosomal RNA genes as an amplification target. P. vivax species-specific primers were designed on the 18S ribosomal gene V8 region, for amplifying both asexual and sporozoite ssrRNA genes. The assay detects amplification products bound to fluorescent SYBR-Green I dye using Perkin-Elmer GeneAmp-5700-SDS. Linear range standard curves from 6 DNA concentration logs (+0.99 correlation coefficients) were obtained. Standard curves were constructed using a plasmid containing target gene for real-time PCR amplification. This P. vivax specific assay is very sensitive, having a three parasite detection limit, and is reproducible and accurate. It involves a "closed-tube" PCR, avoids time-consuming post-PCR manipulation, and decreases potential PCR contamination.  相似文献   

9.
Four Plasmodium species cause malaria in humans: Plasmodium vivax is the most widespread and results in pronounced morbidity. India (population >1 billion) is a major contributor to the burden of vivax malaria. With a resurgence in interest concerning the neglected burden of vivax malaria and the completion of the P. vivax genome, it is timely to review what is known concerning P. vivax in India. The P. vivax population is highly diverse in terms of relapse patterns, drug response and clinical profiles, and highly genetically variable according to studies of antigen genes, isoenzyme markers and microsatellites. The unique epidemiology of malaria in India, where P. vivax predominates over Plasmodium falciparum, renders this location ideal for studying the dynamics of co-infection.  相似文献   

10.
Four Plasmodium species cause malaria in humans, Plasmodium falciparum being the most widely studied to date. All Plasmodium species have paired club-shaped organelles towards their apical extreme named rhoptries that contain many lipids and proteins which are released during target cell invasion. P. falciparum RhopH3 is a rhoptry protein triggering important immune responses in patients from endemic regions. It has also been shown that anti-RhopH3 antibodies inhibit in vitro invasion of erythrocytes. Recent immunisation studies in mice with the Plasmodium yoelii and Plasmodium berghei RhopH3 P. falciparum homologue proteins found that they are able to induce protection in murine models. This study described identifying and characterising RhopH3 protein in Plasmodium vivax; it is encoded by a seven exon gene and expressed during the parasite's asexual stage. PvRhopH3 has similar processing to its homologue in P. falciparum and presents a cellular immunolocalisation pattern characteristic of rhoptry proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Unlike other eukaryotes, malaria parasites in the genus Plasmodium have structurally and functionally different paralogous copies of the cytosolic (cyto-) SSU rRNA (18S rRNA) gene that are expressed at different developmental stages. In P. falciparum, P. vivax, and P. berghei, A-type cyto-SSU rRNA is expressed in asexual stage, while S-type in sporozoite stage. A third type (O-type) has been described in P. vivax. It is expressed only in oocyst stage in the mosquito. Recently, it has been shown that the maintenance of heterogeneous cyto-SSU rRNAs in Plasmodium can be modeled as a birth-and-death process under strong purifying selection [Rooney, A.P., 2004. Mechanisms underlying the evolution and maintenance of functionally heterogeneous 18S rRNA genes in Apicomplexans. Mol. Biol. Evol. 21, 1704-1711]. In this study, we performed detailed phylogenetic analyses of Plasmodium cyto-SSU rRNAs with special emphasis on the evolution of multi-copy genes in simian Plasmodium species. We sequenced paralogous copies of the cyto-SSU rRNA genes from an African simian Plasmodium species, P. gonderi, and Asian simian Plasmodium species, P. fragile, P. coatneyi, P. inui, P. hylobati, P. fieldi, P. simiovale, and P. cynomolgi. Interestingly, all Asian simian Plasmodium species have a single S-type-like gene and several A-type-like genes. Alignment analysis demonstrated for the first time that an approximately 50-residue insertion in the V7 variable region near the stem 43 is shared exclusively by the S-type-like sequences of the Asian simian Plasmodium species and the S- and O-type sequences of P. vivax. We comprehensively analyzed all cyto-SSU rRNA sequences of the genus Plasmodium currently available in the database. Phylogenetic analyses of all publicly available cyto-SSU rRNA sequences for the genus Plasmodium clearly demonstrated that gene duplication events giving rise to A- and S-type-like sequences took place independently at least three times in the Plasmodium evolution, supporting the hypothesis that these genes evolve according to a birth-and-death model.  相似文献   

12.
Pf12 in Plasmodium falciparum has been characterized as a merozoite surface protein and the Pf12 gene is actively transcribed during schizont stage. An orthologous gene, Pv12, has been identified in genome of P. vivax, but the protein product has not been characterized. The Pv12 is a 362 amino acid long polypeptide encoded by a single exon gene PVX_113775, for which orthologous genes have been identified in other Plasmodium species by bioinformatic approaches. Pv12 contains two predicted six-cysteine (6-Cys) domains, which may be constrained by predicted disulfide bonds, and a transmembrane domain and a predicted GPI anchor attachment site in C-terminal region. The recombinant Pv12 protein is recognized by serum antibodies of patients naturally exposed to P. vivax and the native Pv12 protein from parasite extract is also recognized by immune mouse serum. The Pv12 is localized in rhoptry; an apical organelle of the merozoite, and the localization pattern of Pv12 is distinct from that of Pf12 in P. falciparum. The present study suggests that Pv12 is immunogenic in humans during parasite infection and it could play an important role in erythrocyte invasion.  相似文献   

13.
A multiplex PCR was designed for the differential diagnosis of the two parasite species by targeting the 18S rRNA gene with a set of primer combinations, amplifying DNA fragments of 1451-bp and 833-bp for P. falciparum and P. vivax, respectively. The sensitivity of this PCR test was high, as minimal as 0.1 parasite per one microliter of blood sample and a minimum of four copies of the target gene could be detected. For the diagnosis of mixed infection of two Plasmodium spp., there were no apparent competition or cross-reaction between the majority and minority Plasmodium species. The multiplex PCR was evaluated on 210 clinical samples and 60 normal controls. The PCR test yielded highly concordant results with microscopic examination, with the only one exception of a mixed (P. falciparum plus P. vivax) infection case, which was diagnosed as a single infection of P. falciparum by microscopy. We propose that the multiplex PCR is a sensitive, specific, and rapid tool that can serve as a useful differential diagnostic tool for detecting P. falciparum and P. vivax.  相似文献   

14.
Plasmodium vivax: karyotype polymorphism of field isolates   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Pulse-field gradient electrophoresis (PFG) has been applied to the karyotype analysis of Plasmodium vivax isolates obtained directly from infected patients in Sri Lanka. Detection of separated chromosomes was performed either by ethidium bromide staining of gels or by hybridization with a telomer specific probe. Each of the 15 different isolates examined exhibited a different chromosome migration pattern, indicating that a high level of polymorphism prevailed in wild populations of P. vivax. Chromosome size variation was further confirmed using a P. vivax chromosome-specific probe which also demonstrated that, in each isolate, the parasite population appeared to be homogeneous. These observations were made directly on parasites from infected blood, without the necessity for culture amplification, indicating that PFG can be used on a large scale for the epidemiological analysis of wild parasite populations.  相似文献   

15.
Plasmodium vivax is currently the most widespread of the four parasite species causing malaria in humans around the world. It causes more than 75 million clinical episodes per year, mainly on the Asian and American continents. Identifying new antigens to be further tested as anti-P. vivax vaccine candidates has been greatly hampered by the difficulty of maintaining this parasite cultured in vitro. Taking into account that one of the most promising vaccine candidates against Plasmodium falciparum is the rhoptry-associated protein 2, we have identified the P. falciparum rhoptry-associated protein 2 homologue in P. vivax in the present study. This protein has 400 residues, having an N-terminal 21 amino-acid stretch compatible with a signal peptide and, as occurs with its falciparum homologue, it lacks repeat sequences. The protein is expressed in asexual stage P. vivax parasites and polyclonal sera raised against this protein recognised a 46 kDa band in parasite lysate in a Western blot assay.  相似文献   

16.
Rhoptries are cellular organelles localized at the apical pole of apicomplexan parasites. Their content is rich in lipids and proteins that are released during target cell invasion. Plasmodium falciparum rhoptry-associated protein 1 (RAP1) has been the most widely studied among this parasite species' rhoptry proteins and is considered to be a good anti-malarial vaccine candidate since it displays little polymorphism and induces antibodies in infected humans. Monoclonal antibodies directed against RAP1 are also able to inhibit target cell invasion in vitro and protection against P. falciparum experimental challenge is induced when non-human primates are immunized with this protein expressed in its recombinant form. This study describes identifying and characterizing RAP1 in Plasmodium vivax, the most widespread parasite species causing malaria in humans, producing more than 80 million infections yearly, mainly in Asia and Latin America. This new protein is encoded by a two-exon gene, is proteolytically processed in a similar manner to its falciparum homologue and, as observed by microscopy, the immunofluorescence pattern displayed is suggestive of its rhoptry localization. Further studies evaluating P. vivax RAP1 protective efficacy in non-human primates should be carried out taking into account the relevance that its P. falciparum homologue has as an anti-malarial vaccine candidate.  相似文献   

17.
The growth of Plasmodium falciparum in vitro was quantitatively assessed by applying fluorometry using ethidium bromide. The fluorescence intensity of parasites stained with this dye was found to parallel the uptake of 3H-hypoxanthine into nucleic acids during one growth cycle of development. The assay system can be used as a substitute of morphological and radiometric methods in drug-sensitivity tests and for the screening of antimalarials.  相似文献   

18.
Plasmodium vivax is a highly prevalent malaria pathogen of man; the following report is the first to describe the cloning and expression of a major asexual erythrocytic stage antigen of this species. The screening of a genomic DNA expression library with a monoclonal antibody directed against a 200-kDa surface component (Pv200) of the more mature schizonts of P. vivax led to the selection of a recombinant bacterial clone which produced a fusion protein. Mouse and rabbit immune sera raised against the purified fusion protein recognized the 200-kDa parasite antigen on Western blots and reacted with the surface of segmenters by immunofluorescence. Sequencing of the 1.9-kb P. vivax DNA insert coding for this fusion protein revealed a 45-47% homology at the nucleotide level with the P. falciparum gene of a parasite surface antigen, Pf195, which has been shown to be a promising candidate for a malaria vaccine in primates and in man.  相似文献   

19.
We have investigated the evolution of Plasmodium parasites by analyzing DNA sequences of several genes. We reach the following conclusions: (1) The four human parasites, P. falciparum, P. malariae, P. ovale, and P. vivax are very remotely related to each other, so that their evolutionary divergence predates the origin of the hominids; several of these parasites became associated with the human lineage by lateral transfer from other hosts. (2) P. falciparum diverged from P. reichenowi about 8 million years ago, consistently with the time of divergence of the human lineage from the apes; a parsimonious inference is that falciparum has been associated with humans since the origin of the hominids. (3) P. malariae is genetically indistinguishable from P. brasilianum, a parasite of New World monkeys; and, similarly. (4) P. vivax is genetically indistinguishable from the New World monkey parasite P. simium. We infer in each of these two cases a very recent lateral transfer between the human and monkey hosts, and explore alternative hypotheses about the direction of the transfer. We have also investigated the population structure of P. falciparum by analyzing 10 genes and conclude that the extant world populations of this parasite have evolved from a single strain within the last several thousand years. The extensive polymorphisms observed in the highly repetitive central region of the Csp gene, as well as the apparently very divergent two classes of alleles at the Msa-1 gene, are consistent with this conclusion.  相似文献   

20.
The PfCLAG9 has been extensively studied because their immunogenicity. Thereby, the gene product is important for therapeutics interventions and a potential vaccine candidate. Antibodies against synthetic peptides corresponding to selected sequences of the Plasmodium falciparum antigen PfCLAG9 were found in sera of falciparum malaria patients from Rondônia, in the Brazilian Amazon. Much higher antibody titres were found in semi-immune and immune asymptomatic parasite carriers than in subjects suffering clinical infections, corroborating original findings in Papua Guinea. However, sera of Plasmodium vivax patients from the same Amazon area, in particular from asymptomatic vivax parasite carriers, reacted strongly with the same peptides. Bioinformatic analyses revealed regions of similarity between P. falciparum Pfclag9 and the P. vivax ortholog Pvclag7. Indirect fluorescent microscopy analysis showed that antibodies against PfCLAG9 peptides elicited in BALB/c mice react with human red blood cells (RBCs) infected with both P. falciparum and P. vivax parasites. The patterns of reactivity on the surface of the parasitised RBCs are very similar. The present observations support previous findings that PfCLAG9 may be a target of protective immune responses and raises the possibility that the cross reactive antibodies to PvCLAG7 in mixed infections play a role in regulate the fate of Plasmodium mixed infections.  相似文献   

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