cell biology of plasmodium mark f. wiser wiser/malaria

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Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser ://www.tulane.edu/~wiser/malaria/

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Page 1: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Cell Biology of Plasmodium

Mark F. Wiser

http://www.tulane.edu/~wiser/malaria/

Page 2: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

• Merozoite invasion involves specific interactions with the host erythrocyte.

• The actively growing parasite places metabolic and other demands on the host cell.

• Ultrastructural modifica-tions are evident in the infected erythrocyte.

Page 3: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Plasmodium Invasive Stages

ookinete (motile)• mosquito gut

epithelial cells

sporozoite (motile)• mosquito salivary

glands• hepatocytes

merozoite (non-motile)• erythrocytes

Page 4: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Bannister et al (2003) J Cell Sci 116, 3825

Page 5: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Steps in Merozoite Invasion

Page 6: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

• accompanied by erythrocyte deformation

• AMA-1 implicated*• apical membrane antigen-1• binds erythrocytes• antibodies inhibit invasion

and reorientation• antibodies do not inhibit

initial attachment

Reorientation

*Mitchell et al (2004) Inf. Imm. 72, 154.

Page 7: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Secretory (Apical) OrganellesOrganelle Shape Size (nm)Rhoptry Teardrop 300 x 600Microneme Ellipsoidal 40 x 100

Dense Granule Spherical 120 - 140

Page 8: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

•Merozoite proteins:• EBA-175 (sialic binding protein of P. falciparum)• Duffy-binding protein (P. vivax and P. knowlesi)

•TRAP family*:• SSP2 (sporozoite surface protein-2) TRAP

(thrombospondin-related adhesive protein)• Toxoplasma, Eimeria and Cryptosporidium

proteins with homology to SSP2/TRAP• CTRP, circumsporozoite- and TRAP-related

protein (Plasmodium ookinete stage)

Proteins Localized to Micronemes

*Thrombospondin family characterized by von Willebrand factor type A domain. Functions in cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions.

Page 9: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Invasion Receptors/Ligands

SpeciesHost

ReceptorMerozoite

Ligand

P. falciparumglycophorins(sialic acid)

EBA-175

P. vivax,P. knowlesi

Duffy Ag DBP

Page 10: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Tham et al (2012) Tr. Parasitol. 28:23

Page 11: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Electron micrograph from Aikawa et al (1978) J. Cell Biol. 77:72

• microneme secretion• receptor-ligand

interactions• junction formation

Page 12: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Events correlated with entry

• clearance of erythrocyte membrane proteins

• host membrane invagination

• parasitophorous vacuolar membrane (PVM) formation

• junction becomes an annulus (ring)

Page 13: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Tonkin et al 2011, Science 233,463

Rhoptries also participate in junction formation

•Rhoptry neck proteins (RONs) inserted into host membrane

•RON2 interacts with AMA-1

•Forms part of the moving junction

Page 14: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Rhoptries are likely involved in PVM formation

Page 15: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

• Junction Formation– microneme adhesins +

erythrocyte receptors– RON2 + AMA-1

• Parasite Entry– reorganization of submembrane

cytoskeleton– PVM formation– shedding of merozoite surface

proteins– moving junction

• Force generation involves actin and unique Apicomplexan membrane associated myosin

Page 16: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

• TRAP necessary for invasion and gliding motility

• acto-myosin motor = glideosome

Page 17: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Besteiro et al 2011, Cell. Microbiol. 13,797

Page 18: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria
Page 19: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

• Initial Binding• merozoite surface proteins (eg. MSP-1)

• Reorientation (AMA-1) • Microneme Discharge and Junction Formation

• receptor-ligand interactions (adhesive proteins)• Rhoptry Discharge and Vacuole Formation

• clearing of host membrane proteins• moving junction formation (RON2/AMA-1)

• Parasite Entry• mediated by acto-myosin ‘glideosome’• shedding of merozoite surface

• Closure of PVM and Erythrocyte Membrane

Merozoite invasion: a complex and ordered process

Page 20: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria
Page 21: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

• Merozoite invasion involves specific interactions with the host erythrocyte.

• The actively growing parasite places metabolic and other demands on the host cell.

• Ultrastructural modifica-tions are evident in the infected erythrocyte.

Page 22: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Permeability to metabolites is increased in the infected erythrocyte.

Page 23: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria
Page 24: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

P. falciparum expresses ‘knobs’ on the surface of infected erythrocytes. Knobs mediate cytoadherence to endothelial cells.

Page 25: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Several Parasite Proteins Are Associated with Knobs

• KAHRP and PfEMP2 are believed to interact with the submembrane cytoskeleton of the host erythrocyte

• reorganization of the membrane skeleton may result in knob formation

• PfEMP1 crosses the erythrocyte membrane and is exposed on the surface

KAHRP = knob associated histidine rich proteinEMP = erythrocyte membrane protein

Page 26: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

• family of ~60 var genes• conserved intracellular C-terminus

• acidic terminal segment (ATS)• binds cytoskeleton + KAHRP

• transmembrane domain• variable extracellular domain

composed of modules• 2-7 copies of Duffy-binding like

(DBL) domains • 5 sequence types ()

• 0-2 cys-rich interdomain (CIDR) regions

• participates in cytoadherence

PfEMP-1 Structure

Page 27: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

• CD36• Ig super-family (eg,

ICAM-1)• endothelial protein C

receptor • chondroitin sulfate A• E-selectin• thrombospondin• hyaluronic acid

• Rosetting Receptors• CR-1• glycosaminoglycan• blood group A

Possible Host Receptors

Binding SitesDomain ReceptorCIDR CD36

DBL rosetting

DBL ICAM-1

DBL CSA

Page 28: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria
Page 29: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Roberts et al (1992) Nature 357:689• agglutinating anti-sera used to define antigenic types• antigenic variants obtained from a cloned parasite line

A high rate of antigenic variation is observed on the erythrocyte surface

• clones also exhibited different ICAM1/CD36 binding phenotypes

A switch rate of 2% per generation in absence of immune pressure.

Page 30: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Antigenic switching is accompanied by changes in binding phenotype

Page 31: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Binding Phenotypes Can Be Selected In Vivo

Chondroitin sulfate A (CSA) is a complex carbohydrate found on the surface of endothelial cells in the placenta.

Beeson et al (1999) JID 180:464

Page 32: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

A Specific PfEMP1 Variant Binds to CSA

• VAR2CSA binds to CSA

• Found in most parasite strains

• Member of domain cassette (DC) 2

• (defined combination of domains always found together)

Page 33: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Claessens et al (2012) PNAS 109:E1772

Members of DC8 and DC13 associated with binding to brain

endothelial cells and severe malaria

Page 34: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Differential expression of var genes in organs

Montgomery et al (2007) Mol. Microbiol. 65, 959-967

Page 35: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Expression of Particular var Genes May Correlate with Disease

Manifestations and Virulence

Page 36: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria
Page 37: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

Var Gene Expression• one var gene is expressed at a time

(allelic exclusion)

• specific expression site in nucleus

• repressor proteins bind promoters of non-expressed variants

• switching mechanism?

Borst and Genest (2006) Nature 439, 926

Page 38: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria

SUMMARY• parasite modifies host via exported proteins

– permeability changes– knobs + PfEMP-1

• PfEMP-1 participates in cytoadherence

• immune evasion accomplished through antigenic switching (var gene family)

• some var genes may correlate with specific disease manifestations and virulence

• maintain chronic infections

Page 39: Cell Biology of Plasmodium Mark F. Wiser wiser/malaria