首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
The inhibitory effect of metal chelators on intraerythrocytic malarial parasites imply that trace metal have a vital role in the biology of these organisms. In the present work X-ray fluorometry was used to study the status of zinc and iron in human red blood cells infected with Plasmodium falciparum in culture conditions. It was found that while the iron level remains constant throughout the parasite cell cycle, that of zinc increases in parallel with parasite maturation to reach a 2.3-fold higher level than that of uninfected red blood cells. Compartment analysis of infected red blood cells indicated that most of this gain was associated with the parasite and some with the host-cell membrane. Analysis of the malarial pigment showed that the zinc/iron ratio was similar to that of red blood cells, implying the this compound, which results from the digestion of host-cell cytosol, sequesters the zinc of host metalloenzymes. Dipicolinic acid (DPA), like other chelators, was found to inhibit the intracellular development of the parasite with an ED50 of 1 mM. DPA does not penetrate into normal red blood cells but readily permeates into infected cells, although it does not leach out their zinc. It is uncertain whether the inhibitory effect of DPA is exerted through alterations of host cell metabolism or by directly affecting that of the parasite. The putative receptors of zinc in the infected red blood cell are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The importance of pathogen-induced host cell remodelling has been well established for red blood cell infection by the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Exported parasite-encoded proteins, which often possess a signature motif, termed Plasmodium export element (PEXEL) or host-targeting (HT) signal, are critical for the extensive red blood cell modifications. To what extent remodelling of erythrocyte membranes also occurs in non-primate hosts and whether it is in fact a hallmark of all mammalian Plasmodium parasites remains elusive. Here we characterize a novel Plasmodium berghei PEXEL/HT-containing protein, which we term IBIS1. Temporal expression and spatial localization determined by fluorescent tagging revealed the presence of IBIS1 at the parasite/host interface during both liver and blood stages of infection. Targeted deletion of the IBIS1 protein revealed a mild impairment of intra-erythrocytic growth indicating a role for these structures in the rapid expansion of the parasite population in the blood in vivo. In red blood cells, the protein localizes to dynamic, punctate structures external to the parasite. Biochemical and microscopic data revealed that these intra-erythrocytic P. berghei-induced structures (IBIS) are membranous indicating that P. berghei, like P. falciparum, creates an intracellular membranous network in infected red blood cells.  相似文献   

4.
P Ruffin 《Biochimie》1987,69(3):249-253
Mouse red blood cells (RBCs) infected with the malaria parasite Plasmodium yoelii nigeriensis were shown to synthesize a histidine-rich protein (His-RP) in vitro. The existence of this protein was demonstrated by comparing fluorograms of infected red blood cells (IRBCs) labelled with either [14C]histidine or [14C]leucine. The molecular weight of this His-RP was estimated to be 43,500, which compares well with the values reported for the avian parasite P. lophurae (45,000) and for the human parasite P. falciparum (42,000). This result supports the idea that such a protein may play an important role in the biology of all plasmodium species.  相似文献   

5.
Plasmodium falciparum is an obligate intracellular pathogen responsible for worldwide morbidity and mortality. This parasite establishes a parasitophorous vacuole within infected red blood cells wherein it differentiates into multiple daughter cells that must rupture their host cells to continue another infectious cycle. Using atomic force microscopy, we establish that progressive macrostructural changes occur to the host cell cytoskeleton during the last 15 h of the erythrocytic life cycle. We used a comparative proteomics approach to determine changes in the membrane proteome of infected red blood cells during the final steps of parasite development that lead to egress. Mass spectrometry-based analysis comparing the red blood cell membrane proteome in uninfected red blood cells to that of infected red blood cells and postrupture vesicles highlighted two temporally distinct events; (Hay, S. I., et al. (2009). A world malaria map: Plasmodium falciparum endemicity in 2007. PLoS Med. 6, e1000048) the striking loss of cytoskeletal adaptor proteins that are part of the junctional complex, including α/β-adducin and tropomyosin, correlating temporally with the emergence of large holes in the cytoskeleton seen by AFM as early ~35 h postinvasion, and (Maier, A. G., et al. (2008) Exported proteins required for virulence and rigidity of Plasmodium falciparum-infected human erythrocytes. Cell 134, 48-61) large-scale proteolysis of the cytoskeleton during rupture ~48 h postinvasion, mediated by host calpain-1. We thus propose a sequential mechanism whereby parasites first remove a selected set of cytoskeletal adaptor proteins to weaken the host membrane and then use host calpain-1 to dismantle the remaining cytoskeleton, leading to red blood cell membrane collapse and parasite release.  相似文献   

6.
In Plasmodium falciparum, the causative agent of human malaria, the catalytic subunit gene of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (Pfpka-c) exists as a single copy. Interestingly, its expression appears developmentally regulated, being at higher levels in the pathogenic asexual stages than in the sexual forms of parasite that are responsible for transmission to the mosquito vector. Within asexual parasites, PfPKA activity can be readily detected in schizonts. Similar to endogenous PKA activity of noninfected red blood cells, the parasite enzyme can be stimulated by cAMP and inhibited by protein kinase inhibitor.Importantly, ex vivo treatment of infected erythrocytes with the classical PKA-C inhibitor H89 leads to a block in parasite growth. This suggests that the PKA activities of infected red blood cells are essential for parasite multiplication. Finally, structural considerations suggest that drugs targeting the parasite, rather than the erythrocyte enzyme, might be developed that could help in the fight against malaria.  相似文献   

7.
To survive within a red blood cell, the malaria parasite alters dramatically the permeability of the host's plasma membrane (allowing the uptake of essential nutrients and the removal of potentially hazardous metabolites). The pathway(s) responsible for the increased permeability have been proposed as putative chemotherapeutic targets and/or selective routes for antimalarial agents that target the internal parasite. This review covers our current understanding of this parasite-induced phenomenon in Plasmodium falciparum-infected human red blood cells. In particular, recent electrophysiological studies, using the patch-clamp technique, are reviewed.  相似文献   

8.
Sixty years ago, Haldane proposed that certain abnormalities in red blood cells could be selected as malaria-resistance genes. Population studies have confirmed that many human polymorphisms confer resistance to severe malaria, although the mechanisms of protection remain unknown. A recent article proposes a new mechanism for explaining the protective effects of hemoglobin C (HbC). HbC-containing red blood cells have modified displays of malaria surface proteins that reduce parasite adhesiveness and could reduce the risk of severe disease.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Plasmodium falciparum inhabits a niche within the most highly terminally differentiated cell in the human body--the mature red blood cell. Life inside this normally quiescent cell offers the parasite protection from the host's immune system, but provides little in the way of cellular infrastructure. To survive and replicate in the red blood cell, the parasite exports proteins that interact with and dramatically modify the properties of the host red blood cell. As part of this process, the parasite appears to establish a system within the red blood cell cytosol that allows the correct trafficking of parasite proteins to their final cellular destinations. In this review, we examine recent developments in our understanding of the pathways and components involved in the delivery of important parasite-encoded proteins to their final destination in the host red blood cell. These complex processes are not only fundamental to the survival of malaria parasites in vivo, but are also major determinants of the unique pathogenicity of this parasite.  相似文献   

11.
The growth of Plasmodium falciparum in cultures of human red blood cells was studied using acridine orange to stain RNA and DNA, followed by flow cytometric analysis. The cycle of the parasite is characterized by a period of growth, prior to initiation of DNA synthesis, in which a significant increase in red fluorescence is observed, with only a small change in green fluorescence. Following this phase, which is formally similar to the G1 period in mammalian cells, initiation of DNA synthesis is characterized by increases in green fluorescence. Sorting of cells from several regions of the two-dimensional display shows that the distribution of morphological stages correlates with differences in red and green fluorescence. The effect of aphidicolin on the growth cycle of the parasite was also studied.  相似文献   

12.
The asexual reproduction cycle of Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite responsible for severe malaria, occurs within red blood cells. A merozoite invades a red cell in the circulation, develops and multiplies, and after about 48 hours ruptures the host cell, releasing 15–32 merozoites ready to invade new red blood cells. During this cycle, the parasite increases the host cell permeability so much that when similar permeabilization was simulated on uninfected red cells, lysis occurred before ~48 h. So how could infected cells, with a growing parasite inside, prevent lysis before the parasite has completed its developmental cycle? A mathematical model of the homeostasis of infected red cells suggested that it is the wasteful consumption of host cell hemoglobin that prevents early lysis by the progressive reduction in the colloid-osmotic pressure within the host (the colloid-osmotic hypothesis). However, two critical model predictions, that infected cells would swell to near prelytic sphericity and that the hemoglobin concentration would become progressively reduced, remained controversial. In this paper, we are able for the first time to correlate model predictions with recent experimental data in the literature and explore the fine details of the homeostasis of infected red blood cells during five model-defined periods of parasite development. The conclusions suggest that infected red cells do reach proximity to lytic rupture regardless of their actual volume, thus requiring a progressive reduction in their hemoglobin concentration to prevent premature lysis.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The past few years have witnessed considerable progress in molecular and biochemical studies of intracellular trafficking in malaria-infected red cells. Highlights include the identification of solute channels in the vacuolar membrane and the red blood cell membrane, a tubovesicular membrane network that delivers exogenous nutrients and drugs to the parasite, and parasite gene families that mediate adherence to endothelial cells and red cells.  相似文献   

15.
Malaria parasites, Plasmodium spp., invade and exploit red blood cells during their asexual expansion within the vertebrate host. The parasite has evolved a suite of adaptive mechanisms enabling optimal exploitation of the host blood cell environment, avoiding host destruction, maintaining a parasite reservoir of infection and producing sexual transmission stages to infect mosquitoes. The highly variable nature of the host blood environment, both over the course of an infection and as a result of other parasitic infections, has selected for the evolution of considerable phenotypic plasticity in the parasite's response to its environment, particularly those phenotypes concerning transmission of the parasite to mosquitoes. With the evolution of human society, human malaria disease is becoming an increasingly urban problem. This imposes different selection pressures on the parasite. The extent to which the parasite is truly plastic over the short term rather than adaptive over the long term will determine the urban epidemiology of malaria and is essential for developing appropriate control methods. Understanding the adaptive nature of malaria parasites is thus vital for anticipating the future visage of urban human malaria.  相似文献   

16.
Human erythrocytes infected with the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, bind to post-capillary venular endothelium and to uninfected red blood cells via specific receptor-ligand interactions. The interactions between malaria-parasitized erythrocytes and host cells is a highly cooperative and finely regulated process which contributes both to the evasion of host immune mechanisms and to the pathogenesis of the disease, in particular the development of cerebral malaria. The cellular and molecular interactions responsible for the adhesion of parasitzed red cells to host cells are the subject of this review.  相似文献   

17.
The malaria parasite causes lysis of red blood cells, resulting in anemia, a major cause of mortality and morbidity. Intuitively, one would expect the production of red blood cells to increase in order to compensate for this loss. However, it has been observed that this response is weaker than would be expected. Furthermore, iron supplementation for iron deficient children in malaria endemic regions can paradoxically adversely affect the clinical outcome of malaria infection. A possible explanation may lie in the preference that some malaria parasites show for infecting immature red blood cells (reticulocytes). In the presence of a parasite preference for immature red cells, a rise in red cell production can ‘fuel the fire’ of infection by increasing the availability of the parasite's preferred target cell.We present a mathematical model of red blood cell production and infection in order to explore this hypothesis. We assess the effect of varying the reticulocyte replacement rate and preference of the parasite for reticulocytes on four key outcome measures assessing anemia and parasitemia.For a given level of parasite preference for reticulocytes we uncover an optimal erythropoietic response which minimizes disease severity. Increasing red blood cell production much above this optimum confers no benefit to the patient, and in fact can increase the degree of anemia and parasitemia. These conclusions are consistent with epidemiological studies demonstrating that both iron deficiency and anemia are protective against severe malaria, whilst iron supplementation in malaria endemic regions is with an increased number of malaria related adverse effects. Thus, suppression of red blood cell production, rather than being an unfortunate side effect of inflammation, may be a host protective effect against severe malarial anemia.  相似文献   

18.
J W Barnwell 《Blood cells》1990,16(2-3):379-395
Malaria parasites during intraerythrocytic development change the ultrastructure, biophysics, and the antigens of the host red blood cell membrane. Parasite-encoded proteins are associated with, inserted into, or secreted across the infected erythrocyte membrane. Since parasites of the genus Plasmodium are eukaryotic cells, it must be assumed that they possess essentially eukaryotic modes of vesicle-mediated transport and translocation of proteins and membranes. Numerous studies have demonstrated vesicular structures in the cytoplasm of malaria-infected red blood cells and an assortment of parasite proteins associated with the different vesicles, membranes, and membrane-defined compartments. Some parasite polypeptides remain trapped between the parasite and the parasitophorous vacuole membranes PVM, whereas others are associated with morphologically distinct membrane-limited vesicles and vacuoles. Some of these same parasite protein antigens also associate with the erythrocyte membrane or with parasite-induced ultrastructural modifications in the membrane of the parasitized red blood cells. This implies that intracellular transport occurs in malaria-infected erythrocytes, a capacity that uninfected red blood cells normally lose upon enucleation. The specific locations of parasite antigens within the infected cell also implys the existence of targeting signals in the translocated parasite polypeptides and perhaps transport-mediating proteins. The genes corresponding to some of these translocated proteins have been sequenced. Typical (and in some cases atypical) signal peptide sequences occur, as well as a number of sequences that may result in posttranslational modifications. How or if these features figure in to the translocation across, and targeting to a particular membrane compartment of the intraerythrocytic parasite remains unknown.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Analysis of short RNAs in the malaria parasite and its red blood cell host   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Rathjen T  Nicol C  McConkey G  Dalmay T 《FEBS letters》2006,580(22):5185-5188
RNA interference (RNAi) is an RNA degradation process that involves short, double-stranded RNAs (dsRNA) as sequence specificity factors. The natural function of the RNAi machinery is to generate endogenous short double-stranded RNAs to regulate gene expression. It has been shown that treatment of Plasmodium falciparum, the etiologic agent of malaria, with dsRNA induces degradation of the corresponding microRNA (miRNA), yet typical RNAi-associated genes have not been identifiable in the parasite genome. To clarify this discrepancy we set out to clone short RNAs from P. falciparum-infected red blood cells and from purified parasites. We did not find any short RNA that was not a rRNA or tRNA fragment. Indeed, only known human miRNAs were isolated in parasite preparations indicating that very few if any short RNAs exist in P. falciparum. This suggests a different mechanism than classical RNAi in observations of dsRNA-mediated degradation. Of the human miRNAs identified, the human miRNA mir-451 accumulates at a very high level in both infected and healthy red blood cells. Interestingly, mir-451 was not detectable in a series of immortalised cell lines representing progenitor stages of all major blood lineages, suggesting that mir-451 may play a role in the differentiation of erythroid cells.  相似文献   

20.
Recognition and application of blood group differences on human red cells permitted the development of safe procedures for blood transfusion. Blood group antigens are markers on surface-exposed red cell proteins or the sugar moiety of glycoproteins or glycolipids. Apart from their presumed biological function, some antigens have been identified as receptors for host/parasite interactions. Thus, carbohydrates that determine P antigenicity are the binding receptor for certain strains of pyelonephritic coliforms. Other pathogenic coliforms bind to the membrane structure that carries the Dra antigen. A structure associated with Duffy antigens is the attachment receptor for the parasite of Plasmodium vivax malaria, while Plasmodium falciparum parasites bind to structures associated with membrane glycophorins. Structure/function relationships have been established by the finding that lack of Rh protein in red cells of Rhnull phenotype is associated with stomatocytic cell morphology and a hemolytic state. Absence of glycophorin C, and the Gerbich blood group antigens that it carries, is associated with elliptocytic red cells. Absence of Kx antigen protein in the Kell system is associated with the McLeod blood group phenotype, with acanthocytic cell morphology and reduced in vivo survival. McLeod individuals also have late-onset muscular dystrophy and neurological disorders.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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