Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
44,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Because invasion of erythrocytes by Plasmodium falciparum merozoites involves multiple receptor-ligand interactions, it may be necessary to develop a multivalent malaria vaccine that is comprised of distinct parasite ligands. PfAMA-1, PfMSP1, and PfEBA-175 are merozoite proteins that play important roles in invasion. We have constructed a PfCP-2.9 chimeric protein consisting of PfAMA-1 and PfMSP1 and tested it for immunogenicity in animal models and humans. The F2 subdomain of PfEBA-175 (PfEBA-175II F2) was identified as the binding domain for glycophorin A on erythrocytes. In this study, we used the codon frequencies of the yeast Pichia pastoris to redesign and synthesize a gene encoding the F2 domain. We found that the codon-optimized gene was expressed at a high level in P. pastoris as a soluble protein with a yield of about 300 mg/liter. The expressed protein was able to bind normal erythrocytes but not those treated with neuraminidase or trypsin. Moreover, the protein was recognized by the sera of malaria patients and was highly immunogenic in mice, rabbits, and rhesus monkeys. Immunoglobulin G isolated from both immunized rabbits and monkeys inhibited in vitro parasite growth. Immunization of animals with a combination of PfEBA-175II F2 and PfCP-2.9 did not result in antigen (Ag) competition in animals. Moreover, antibodies to both PfEBA-175II F2 and PfCP-2.9, isolated from rabbits immunized with both constructs, inhibited parasite growth in vitro. The combination of high yield, functional folding, antibody inhibition, and lack of Ag competition provides support for inclusion of these merozoite proteins in a combination vaccine against infection with blood-stage parasites.
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PMID:Evaluation of three Pichia pastoris-expressed Plasmodium falciparum merozoite proteins as a combination vaccine against infection with blood-stage parasites. 1617 27

PyMSP-8 is a member of a family of merozoite surface proteins that have been described in Plasmodium that are characterized by the presence of a glycolipid membrane anchor and 1-2 epidermal growth factor-like domains. Immunization with recombinant PyMSP-8 has also been shown to protect mice against lethal Plasmodium yoelii malaria. In this report, we demonstrate that PyMSP-8 expression is detectable throughout the entire erythrocytic life cycle of P. yoelii 17XL, reaching peak level during trophozoite development. As determined by immunofluorescence, PyMSP-8 co-localizes with PyMSP-1 on the surface of merozoites in segmented schizonts and on the surface of ring stages in newly invaded erythrocytes. PyMSP-8 binds to the surface of uninfected mouse RBCs in a species-dependent manner, suggesting a potential role in merozoite attachment to and/or invasion of erythrocytes. The receptor for PyMSP-8 on RBCs is sensitive to trypsin digestion but is resistant to treatment with chymotrypsin or neuraminidase and is putatively identified as a approximately 105kDa membrane protein. Since PyMSP-8 binds to both mature RBCs as well as reticulocytes, it appears unlikely that the function of PyMSP-8 is restricted to the invasion of normocytes. While proper folding and conformation of PyMSP-8 are important, linear determinants of PyMSP-8 also contribute to erythrocyte binding. Unexpectedly, however, PyMSP-8 specific antibodies that are protective in vivo, do not disrupt the binding of rPyMSP-8 to its receptor on erythrocytes. The data indicate that protective anti-PyMSP-8 antibodies mediate their effect in vivo by an alternate mechanism(s).
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PMID:Expression, localization, and erythrocyte binding activity of Plasmodium yoelii merozoite surface protein-8. 1684 54

The invasion of erythrocytes by Plasmodium falciparum occurs through multiple pathways that can be studied in vitro by examining the invasion of erythrocytes treated with enzymes such as neuraminidase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin. We have studied the invasion pathways used by 31 Kenyan P. falciparum isolates from children with uncomplicated or severe malaria. Six distinct invasion profiles were detected, out of eight possible profiles. The majority of isolates (23 of 31) showed neuraminidase-resistant, trypsin-sensitive invasion, characteristic of the pathway mediated by an unknown parasite ligand and erythrocyte receptor "X." The neuraminidase-sensitive, trypsin-sensitive phenotype consistent with invasion mediated by the binding of parasite ligand erythrocyte binding antigen 175 to glycophorin A, the most common invasion profile in a previous study of Gambian field isolates, was seen in only 3 of 31 Kenyan isolates. No particular invasion profile was associated with severe P. falciparum malaria, and there was no significant difference in the levels of inhibition by the various enzyme treatments between isolates from children with severe malaria and those from children with uncomplicated malaria (P, >0.1 for all enzymes; Mann-Whitney U test). These results do not support the hypothesis that differences in invasion phenotypes play an important role in malaria virulence and indicate that considerable gaps remain in our knowledge of the molecular basis of invasion pathways in natural P. falciparum infections.
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PMID:Invasion pathways and malaria severity in Kenyan Plasmodium falciparum clinical isolates. 1743 38

The malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, invades the human erythrocyte through a complex interaction with erythrocyte receptors characterized by patterns of resistance to various enzymes. As invasion rates are influenced by blood group polymorphisms, we reasoned that the extremely rare rhesus null (Rh(null)) erythrocytes could be informative in characterizing receptors. The aim was to test whether the complete absence of the Rh complex from the cell membrane impacted on parasite invasion. Enzyme treatment patterns for four P. falciparum isolates were first characterised for normal Rh cells. Two isolates showed an enzyme treatment pattern not hitherto described, with resistance to neuraminidase, trypsin and chymotrypsin. In contrast, all isolates had enhanced invasion rates for the Rh(null) cell for all enzyme treatment regimens. The first finding suggests there is another pathway that P. falciparum can utilise to invade the host. We speculate that the Rh null cell membrane exposes a novel ligand defined as Receptor N.
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PMID:Invasion of Rh Null Cells by Plasmodium falciparum identifies a new invasion pathway. 1791 50

Proteins that coat Plasmodium falciparum merozoite surface and those secreted from its apical secretory organelles are considered promising candidates for the vaccine against malaria. In the present study, we have identified an asparagine rich parasite protein (PfAARP; Gene ID PFD1105w), that harbors a predicted signal sequence, a C-terminal transmembrane region and whose transcription and translation patterns are similar to some well characterized merozoite surface/apical proteins. PfAARP was localized to the apical end of the merozoites by GFP-targeting approach using an inducible, schizont-stage expression system, by immunofluorescence assays using anti-PfAARP antibodies. Immuno-electron microsopic studies showed that PfAARP is localized in the apical ends of the rhoptries in the merozoites. RBC binding assays with PfAARP expressed on COS cells surface showed that it binds to RBCs through its N-terminal region with a receptor on the RBC surface that is sensitive to trypsin and neuraminidase treatments. Sequencing of PfAARP from different P. falciparum strains as well as field isolates showed that the N-terminal region is highly conserved. Recombinant protein corresponding to the N-terminal region of PfAARP (PfAARP-N) was produced in its functional form in E. coli. PfAARP-N showed reactivity with immune sera from individuals residing in P. falciparum endemic area. The anti-PfAARP-N rabbit antibodies significantly inhibited parasite invasion in vitro. Our data on localization, functional assays and invasion inhibition, suggest a role of PfAARP in erythrocyte binding and invasion by the merozoite.
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PMID:Identification and characterization of a novel Plasmodium falciparum merozoite apical protein involved in erythrocyte binding and invasion. 1832 51

Plasmodium falciparum invasion into human erythrocytes relies on the interaction between multiple parasite ligands and their respective erythrocyte receptors. The sialic acid-independent invasion pathway is dependent on the expression of P. falciparum reticulocyte binding protein-like homologue 4 (PfRh4), as disruption of the gene abolishes the ability of parasites to switch to this pathway. We show that PfRh4 is present as an invasion ligand in culture supernatants as a 160-kDa proteolytic fragment. We confirm that PfRh4 binds to the surfaces of erythrocytes through recognition of an erythrocyte receptor that is neuraminidase resistant but trypsin and chymotrypsin sensitive. Serum antibodies from malaria-exposed individuals show reactivity against the binding domain of PfRh4. Purified immunoglobulin G raised in rabbits against the binding domain of PfRh4 blocked the binding of native PfRh4 to the surfaces of erythrocytes and inhibited erythrocyte invasion of parasites using sialic acid-independent invasion pathways and grown in neuraminidase-treated erythrocytes. Our results suggest PfRh4 is a potential vaccine candidate.
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PMID:Antibodies to reticulocyte binding protein-like homologue 4 inhibit invasion of Plasmodium falciparum into human erythrocytes. 1930 8

Proteins on the surface of the merozoite, the invasive form of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum,and those secreted from its apical secretory organelles are promising vaccine candidates against blood stage malaria. In the present study, we have identified a novel parasite protein (PfDBLMSP; Gene IDPF10_0348), that harbors a predicted signal sequence, a central Duffy binding-like (DBL) domain and a secreted polymorphic antigen associated with merozoites (SPAM) domain in its C-terminal half. Transcription and translation of pfdblmsp is up-regulated specifically in schizont stage parasites, similar to other well-chararacterized merozoite proteins involved in invasion of red blood cells (RBCs). PfDBLMSPwas localized on the merozoite surface with a GFP targeting approach using schizont-stage specific expression systems, and by immunofluorescence assays of the endogenous protein. PfDBLMSP expressed on the surface of mammalian cells (COS-7) showed binding with human RBCs and this binding was sensitive to trypsin and neuraminidase treatments. The recombinant proteins corresponding to the DBL and SPAM domains showed reactivity with immune sera from individuals residing in P. falciparum endemic areas. Polymorphism in PfDBLMSP sequences from different P. falciparum strains and field isolates suggested that its DBL domain is under natural immune pressure. Our data on localization and functional assays suggest a possible role of PfDBLMSP in binding of merozoites with erythrocytes during invasion.
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PMID:A novel Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte binding protein associated with the merozoite surface, PfDBLMSP. 1936 30

Erythrocyte invasion is central to malaria parasite replication and virulence. Plasmodium falciparum parasites use different alternative erythrocyte receptors and vary in expression of erythrocyte-binding antigenic (EBA) proteins and reticulocyte-binding protein homologues (Rh). Parasite invasion phenotypes and schizont-stage transcript expression profiles of the 8 eba and Rh protein-coding genes without internal stop codons were determined for 163 clinical isolates cultured ex vivo in The Gambia. There was extensive diversity in ability to invade erythrocytes treated with neuraminidase, trypsin, or chymotrypsin, and severe malaria isolates were less restricted by trypsin treatment than were mild malaria isolates (P = .015). Expression profiles of the eba and Rh genes showed distinct clusters indicating coordinated alternative transcription. The most divergent of 5 major clusters was dominated by Rh2b, with virtually no expression of eba175 or eba140 genes (which were dominant in the other 4 clusters). Particular transcripts were significantly correlated with parasitemia (Rh5 was positively correlated and eba140 negatively correlated; P < .01 for both) and age of patients (eba181 was positively correlated and eba175 negatively correlated; P < .001 for both) but not with invasion phenotypes or severity of malaria. Severe and mild malaria isolates were also evenly represented across the different expression clusters.
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PMID:Erythrocyte invasion and merozoite ligand gene expression in severe and mild Plasmodium falciparum malaria. 2005 Aug 6

Plasmodium falciparum is a highly lethal malaria parasite of humans. A major portion of its life cycle is dedicated to invading and multiplying inside erythrocytes. The molecular mechanisms of erythrocyte invasion are incompletely understood. P. falciparum depends heavily on sialic acid present on glycophorins to invade erythrocytes. However, a significant proportion of laboratory and field isolates are also able to invade erythrocytes in a sialic acid-independent manner. The identity of the erythrocyte sialic acid-independent receptor has been a mystery for decades. We report here that the complement receptor 1 (CR1) is a sialic acid-independent receptor for the invasion of erythrocytes by P. falciparum. We show that soluble CR1 (sCR1) as well as polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies against CR1 inhibit sialic acid-independent invasion in a variety of laboratory strains and wild isolates, and that merozoites interact directly with CR1 on the erythrocyte surface and with sCR1-coated microspheres. Also, the invasion of neuraminidase-treated erythrocytes correlates with the level of CR1 expression. Finally, both sialic acid-independent and dependent strains invade CR1 transgenic mouse erythrocytes preferentially over wild-type erythrocytes but invasion by the latter is more sensitive to neuraminidase. These results suggest that both sialic acid-dependent and independent strains interact with CR1 in the normal red cell during the invasion process. However, only sialic acid-independent strains can do so without the presence of glycophorin sialic acid. Our results close a longstanding and important gap in the understanding of the mechanism of erythrocyte invasion by P. falciparum that will eventually make possible the development of an effective blood stage vaccine.
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PMID:Complement receptor 1 is a sialic acid-independent erythrocyte receptor of Plasmodium falciparum. 2058 58

The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum invades human erythrocytes through multiple pathways utilizing several ligand-receptor interactions. These interactions are broadly classified in two groups according to their dependency on sialic acid residues. Here, we focus on the sialic acid-dependent pathway by using purified glycophorins and red blood cells (RBCs) to screen a cDNA phage display library derived from P. falciparum FCR3 strain, a sialic acid-dependent strain. This screen identified several parasite proteins including the erythrocyte-binding ligand-1, EBL-1. The phage cDNA insert encoded the 69-amino acid peptide, termed F2i, which is located within the F2 region of the DBL domain, designated here as D2, of EBL-1. Recombinant D2 and F2i polypeptides bound to purified glycophorins and RBCs, and the F2i peptide was found to interfere with binding of D2 domain to its receptor. Both D2 and F2i polypeptides bound to trypsin-treated but not neuraminidase or chymotrypsin-treated erythrocytes, consistent with known glycophorin B resistance to trypsin, and neither the D2 nor F2i polypeptide bound to glycophorin B-deficient erythrocytes. Importantly, purified D2 and F2i polypeptides partially inhibited merozoite reinvasion in human erythrocytes. Our results show that the host erythrocyte receptor glycophorin B directly interacts with the DBL domain of parasite EBL-1, and the core binding site is contained within the 69 amino acid F2i region (residues 601-669) of the DBL domain. Together, these findings suggest that a recombinant F2i peptide with stabilized structure could provide a protective function at blood stage infection and represents a valuable addition to a multi-subunit vaccine against malaria.
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PMID:Identification of a specific region of Plasmodium falciparum EBL-1 that binds to host receptor glycophorin B and inhibits merozoite invasion in human red blood cells. 2227 81


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