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Plasmodium parasites cause malaria in mammalian hosts and are transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes. Activated gametocytes in the mosquito midgut egress from erythrocytes followed by fertilization and zygote formation. Zygotes differentiate into motile invasive ookinetes, which penetrate the midgut epithelium before forming oocysts beneath the basal lamina. Ookinete development and traversal across the mosquito midgut wall are major bottlenecks in the parasite life cycle. In ookinetes, surface proteins and proteins stored in apical organelles have been shown to be involved in parasite-host interactions. A group of ookinete proteins that are predicted to have such functions are named PSOPs (putative secreted ookinete protein). PSOP1 is possibly involved in migration through the midgut wall, and here its subcellular localization was examined in ookinetes by immunoelectron microscopy. PSOP1 localizes to the micronemes of Plasmodium yoelii and Plasmodium berghei ookinetes, indicating that it is stored and possibly apically secreted during ookinete penetration through the mosquito midgut wall.  相似文献   

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Successful development of Plasmodium sexual stages is essential for parasite survival, but the genes involved are poorly understood. We ‘knocked out’ the male development gene-1 (mdv-1) locus in Plasmodium berghei and found it to be important in female gametocyte activation. Indirect immunofluoresence assays show MDV-1 has a punctate cytoplasmic distribution in gametocytes. After activation of both females and males, MDV-1 is more peripherally located but in males exclusively it becomes concentrated in a few large foci. In vitro ookinete conversion assays that test the ability of activated female gametocytes to develop into retort stage ookinetes, suggests a complicit role for MDV-1, with the knock-out parasite producing 86% reduction in ookinetes. The retort stage ookinete develops from the zygote by increasing growth of an apical protrusion and MDV-1 locates at the ‘leading’ extracellular apical pole of this protrusion. In the fully developed ookinete MDV-1 is localised to the posterior pole. In vivo, the knock-out parasites demonstrate a phenotype in which there is a 90% reduction of parasite transmission to oocysts in mosquitoes.  相似文献   

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Sexual development in malaria parasites involves multiple signal transduction pathways mediated by reversible protein phosphorylation. Here, we functionally characterised a protein phosphatase, Ser/Thr protein phosphatase 5 (PbPP5), during sexual development of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei. The recombinant protein phosphatase domain displayed obvious protein phosphatase activity and was sensitive to PP1/PP2A inhibitors including cantharidic acid (IC50 = 122.2 nM), cantharidin (IC50 = 74.3 nM), endothall (IC50 = 365.5 nM) and okadaic acid (IC50 = 1.3 nM). PbPP5 was expressed in both blood stages and ookinetes with more prominent expression during sexual development. PbPP5 was localised in the cytoplasm of the parasite and highly concentrated beneath the parasite plasma membrane in free merozoites and ookinetes. Targeted deletion of the pbpp5 gene had no influence on asexual blood-stage parasite multiplication or the survival curve of the infected hosts. However, male gamete formation and fertility were severely affected, resulting in almost complete blockade of ookinete conversion and oocyst development in the Δpbpp5 lines. This sexual development defect was rescued by crossing Δpbpp5 with the female defective Δpbs47 parasite line, but not with the male defective Δpbs48/45 line, thus confirming the essential function of the pbpp5 gene in male gamete fertility. Furthermore, the aforementioned PP1/PP2A inhibitors all had inhibitory effects on exflagellation of male gametocytes and ookinete conversion. In particular, endothall, a selective inhibitor of PP2A, completely blocked exflagellation and ookinete conversion at ~548.3 nM. This study elucidated an essential function of PbPP5 during male gamete development and fertility.  相似文献   

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The molecular mechanisms regulating the sexual development of malaria parasites from gametocytes to oocysts in their mosquito vector are still largely unexplored. In other eukaryotes, NIMA-related kinases (Neks) regulate cell cycle progression and have been implicated in the regulation of meiosis. Here, we demonstrate that Nek-4, a new Plasmodium member of the Nek family, is essential for completion of the sexual cycle of the parasite. Recombinant Plasmodium falciparum Nek-4 possesses protein kinase activity and displays substrate preferences similar to those of other Neks. Nek-4 is highly expressed in gametocytes, yet disruption of the nek-4 gene in the rodent malaria parasite P. berghei has no effect on gamete formation and subsequent fertilization. However, further differentiation of zygotes into ookinetes is abolished. Measurements of nuclear DNA content indicate that zygotes lacking Nek-4 fail to undergo the genome replication to the tetraploid level that precedes meiosis. Cell cycle progression in the zygote is identified as a likely precondition for its morphological transition to the ookinete and for the successful establishment of a malaria infection in the mosquito.  相似文献   

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Background

The population dynamics of Plasmodium sporogony within mosquitoes consists of an early phase where parasite abundance decreases during the transition from gametocyte to oocyst, an intermediate phase where parasite abundance remains static as oocysts, and a later phase where parasite abundance increases during the release of progeny sporozoites from oocysts. Sporogonic development is complete when sporozoites invade the mosquito salivary glands. The dynamics and efficiency of this developmental sequence were determined in laboratory strains of Anopheles dirus, Anopheles minimus and Anopheles sawadwongporni mosquitoes for Plasmodium vivax parasites circulating naturally in western Thailand.

Methods

Mosquitoes were fed blood from 20 symptomatic Thai adults via membrane feeders. Absolute densities were estimated for macrogametocytes, round stages (= female gametes/zygotes), ookinetes, oocysts, haemolymph sporozoites and salivary gland sporozoites. From these census data, five aspects of population dynamics were analysed; 1) changes in life-stage prevalence during early sporogony, 2) kinetics of life-stage formation, 3) efficiency of life-stage transitions, 4) density relationships between successive life-stages, and 5) parasite aggregation patterns.

Results

There was no difference among the three mosquito species tested in total losses incurred by P. vivax populations during early sporogony. Averaged across all infections, parasite populations incurred a 68-fold loss in abundance, with losses of ca. 19-fold, 2-fold and 2-fold at the first (= gametogenesis/fertilization), second (= round stage transformation), and third (= ookinete migration) life-stage transitions, respectively. However, total losses varied widely among infections, ranging from 6-fold to over 2,000-fold loss. Losses during gametogenesis/fertilization accounted for most of this variability, indicating that gametocytes originating from some volunteers were more fertile than those from other volunteers. Although reasons for such variability were not determined, gametocyte fertility was not correlated with blood haematocrit, asexual parasitaemia, gametocyte density or gametocyte sex ratio. Round stages and ookinetes were present in mosquito midguts for up to 48 hours and development was asynchronous. Parasite losses during fertilization and round stage differentiation were more influenced by factors intrinsic to the parasite and/or factors in the blood, whereas ookinete losses were more strongly influenced by mosquito factors. Oocysts released sporozoites on days 12 to 14, but even by day 22 many oocysts were still present on the midgut. The per capita production was estimated to be approximately 500 sporozoites per oocyst and approximately 75% of the sporozoites released into the haemocoel successfully invaded the salivary glands.

Conclusion

The major developmental bottleneck in early sporogony occurred during the transition from macrogametocyte to round stage. Sporozoite invasion into the salivary glands was very efficient. Information on the natural population dynamics of sporogony within malaria-endemic areas may benefit intervention strategies that target early sporogony (e.g., transmission blocking vaccines, transgenic mosquitoes).  相似文献   

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Malaria‐causing parasites rely on an actin–myosin‐based motor for the invasion of different host cells and tissue traversal in mosquitoes and vertebrates. The unusual myosin A of Plasmodium spp. has a unique N‐terminal extension, which is important for red blood cell invasion by P. falciparum merozoites in vitro and harbors a phosphorylation site at serine 19. Here, using the rodent‐infecting P. berghei we show that phosphorylation of serine 19 increases ookinete but not sporozoite motility and is essential for efficient transmission of Plasmodium by mosquitoes as S19A mutants show defects in mosquito salivary gland entry. S19A along with E6R mutations slow ookinetes and salivary gland sporozoites in both 2D and 3D environments. In contrast to data from purified proteins, both E6R and S19D mutations lower force generation by sporozoites. Our data show that the phosphorylation cycle of S19 influences parasite migration and force generation and is critical for optimal migration of parasites during transmission from and to the mosquito.  相似文献   

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The ookinete is the key determinant of infection within the mosquito vector, yet there are few population studies of ookinetes in nature. This investigation compared different techniques used to estimate ookinete densities in mosquitoes. Laboratory-reared Anopheles dirus mosquitoes were fed on gametocytemic blood drawn from 7 Plasmodium vivax patients at a malaria clinic in Mae Sot, Thailand. At 20-26 hr, bloodmeals were excised. Three techniques were evaluated, i.e., hemacytometer counts under phase-contrast microscope, Giemsa staining of bloodmeal smears, and immunofluorescent staining with a monoclonal antibody specific against the 25-kDa antigen expressed on the surface of P. vivax zygotes and ookinetes. Additional mosquitoes were dissected at day 10 for oocysts. The hemacytometer method was the simplest and quickest method but lacked precision at low ookinete densities. Immunofluorescent staining was the most sensitive, accurate, and the only method that enabled unequivocal detection of zygotes. Bloodmeals contained a mixture of zygotes, retorts, and mature ookinetes, indicating that postzygotic development of P. vivax in A. dirus was asynchronous. The conversion efficiency of zygotes/ookinetes to oocysts varied among patients and was independent of zygote-ookinete density, suggesting that variations in host blood composition, e.g., antibodies, drugs, etc., may influence the success of zygote-ookinete development.  相似文献   

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Protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation (catalysed by kinases and phosphatases, respectively) are post-translational modifications that play key roles in many eukaryotic signalling pathways, and are often deregulated in a number of pathological conditions in humans. In the malaria parasite Plasmodium, functional insights into its kinome have only recently been achieved, with over half being essential for blood stage development and another 14 kinases being essential for sexual development and mosquito transmission. However, functions for any of the plasmodial protein phosphatases are unknown. Here, we use reverse genetics in the rodent malaria model, Plasmodium berghei, to examine the role of a unique protein phosphatase containing kelch-like domains (termed PPKL) from a family related to Arabidopsis BSU1. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed that the family of BSU1-like proteins including PPKL is encoded in the genomes of land plants, green algae and alveolates, but not in other eukaryotic lineages. Furthermore, PPKL was observed in a distinct family, separate to the most closely-related phosphatase family, PP1. In our genetic approach, C-terminal GFP fusion with PPKL showed an active protein phosphatase preferentially expressed in female gametocytes and ookinetes. Deletion of the endogenous ppkl gene caused abnormal ookinete development and differentiation, and dissociated apical microtubules from the inner-membrane complex, generating an immotile phenotype and failure to invade the mosquito mid-gut epithelium. These observations were substantiated by changes in localisation of cytoskeletal tubulin and actin, and the micronemal protein CTRP in the knockout mutant as assessed by indirect immunofluorescence. Finally, increased mRNA expression of dozi, a RNA helicase vital to zygote development was observed in ppkl mutants, with global phosphorylation studies of ookinete differentiation from 1.5–24 h post-fertilisation indicating major changes in the first hours of zygote development. Our work demonstrates a stage-specific essentiality of the unique PPKL enzyme, which modulates parasite differentiation, motility and transmission.  相似文献   

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Kajla MK  Shi L  Li B  Luckhart S  Li J  Paskewitz SM 《PloS one》2011,6(5):e19649

Background

Plasmodium requires an obligatory life stage in its mosquito host. The parasites encounter a number of insults while journeying through this host and have developed mechanisms to avoid host defenses. Lysozymes are a family of important antimicrobial immune effectors produced by mosquitoes in response to microbial challenge.

Methodology/Principal Findings

A mosquito lysozyme was identified as a protective agonist for Plasmodium. Immunohistochemical analyses demonstrated that Anopheles gambiae lysozyme c-1 binds to oocysts of Plasmodium berghei and Plasmodium falciparum at 2 and 5 days after infection. Similar results were observed with Anopheles stephensi and P. falciparum, suggesting wide occurrence of this phenomenon across parasite and vector species. Lysozyme c-1 did not bind to cultured ookinetes nor did recombinant lysozyme c-1 affect ookinete viability. dsRNA-mediated silencing of LYSC-1 in Anopheles gambiae significantly reduced the intensity and the prevalence of Plasmodium berghei infection. We conclude that this host antibacterial protein directly interacts with and facilitates development of Plasmodium oocysts within the mosquito.

Conclusions/Significance

This work identifies mosquito lysozyme c-1 as a positive mediator of Plasmodium development as its reduction reduces parasite load in the mosquito host. These findings improve our understanding of parasite development and provide a novel target to interrupt parasite transmission to human hosts.  相似文献   

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Malaria transmission depends on sexual stage Plasmodium parasites successfully invading Anopheline mosquito midguts following a blood meal. However, the molecular mechanisms of Plasmodium invasion of mosquito midguts have not been fully elucidated. Previously, we showed that genetic polymorphisms in the fibrinogen-related protein 1 (FREP1) gene are significantly associated with Plasmodium falciparum infection in Anopheles gambiae, and FREP1 is important for Plasmodium berghei infection of mosquitoes. Here we identify that the FREP1 protein is secreted from the mosquito midgut epithelium and integrated as tetramers into the peritrophic matrix, a chitinous matrix formed inside the midgut lumen after a blood meal feeding. Moreover, we show that the FREP1 can directly bind Plasmodia sexual stage gametocytes and ookinetes. Notably, ablating FREP1 expression or targeting FREP1 with antibodies significantly decreases P. falciparum infection in mosquito midguts. Our data support that the mosquito-expressed FREP1 mediates mosquito midgut invasion by multiple species of Plasmodium parasites via anchoring ookinetes to the peritrophic matrix and enabling parasites to penetrate the peritrophic matrix and the epithelium. Thus, targeting FREP1 can limit malaria transmission.  相似文献   

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