| Literature DB >> 22986493 |
Alan F Cowman1, Drew Berry, Jake Baum.
Abstract
Malaria is a major disease of humans caused by protozoan parasites from the genus Plasmodium. It has a complex life cycle; however, asexual parasite infection within the blood stream is responsible for all disease pathology. This stage is initiated when merozoites, the free invasive blood-stage form, invade circulating erythrocytes. Although invasion is rapid, it is the only time of the life cycle when the parasite is directly exposed to the host immune system. Significant effort has, therefore, focused on identifying the proteins involved and understanding the underlying mechanisms behind merozoite invasion into the protected niche inside the human erythrocyte.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22986493 PMCID: PMC3444787 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201206112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 10.539
Figure 1.The life cycle of The Anopheles mosquito bites a human and injects sporozoite forms. These move to the liver and invade hepatocytes, in which they develop to produce exoerythrocytic merozoite forms that are released into the blood stream. Merozoites invade erythrocytes and grow into trophozoites and mature schizonts. Merozoites are released that reinvade new erythrocytes. Gametocytes, formed from the asexual blood stage, are taken up by a feeding mosquito into the gut where they mature to form male and female gametes. The fertilized zygote develops to an ookinete and an oocyst and finally sporozoites that migrate to the salivary glands.
Figure 2.Three-dimensional diagram of a merozoite and its core secretory organelles. (A) The sectioned cell highlights the major cellular architecture and organelle repertoire of the invasive merozoite, with dissected organelles listing core molecular constituents of these key invasion-related compartments. Of note, though definition of secretory organelles is limited to dense granules, micronemes, and rhoptries, there is mounting evidence that subpopulations of organelles and subcompartmentalization within organelles (specifically the rhoptries) certainly exist. The rhoptries are divided into three segments, with PfRh1, -2a, -2b, -4, and -5 in the most distal segment and RON2-5 in the next segment. This organization is predicted based on functionality and early release of the PfRh proteins onto the merozoite surface during invasion as opposed to the release of the RON protein complex, but it has not yet been demonstrated definitively (Riglar et al., 2011). The dense granules are released very soon after invasion and include components of a putative protein translocon that is inserted into the parasitophorous vacuole membrane. Ring-infected erythrocyte surface antigen (RESA) is released from dense granules and exported to the infected red blood cell. The body of the rhoptry bulb contains lipids and other proteins involved in forming the parasitophorous vacuole, including RAP1-3 and RAMA. (B) A P. falciparum merozoite in the process of invading a human red blood cell (image courtesy of S. Ralph, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia). Bar, 200 nm.
Figure 3.A time course of merozoite invasion of the erythrocyte from egress through postinvasion. (A) A cellular overview is given with associated timing of organelle secretion and key mechanistic or signaling steps listed below. After apical reorientation, the merozoite establishes a tight junction that is marked by RON4 and AMA1. The tight junction is ultimately connected to the actomyosin motor, although the exact nature of this has yet to be established. As the tight junction moves across the merozoite surface, proteins are shed into the supernatant through the activity of proteases such as ROM4, ROM1, SUB1, and SUB2. The parasitophorous vacuole and membrane are formed primarily from the rhoptries, although some red cell membrane components are included, which expel their contents, forming the space into which the parasite can move under the action of the actomyosin motor. Once the tight junction reaches the posterior end of the parasite, the membranes seal by an as yet unknown mechanism.
The invasion-related proteins of the P. falciparum merozoite
| Name | PlasmoDB accession number | Genetic knockout | Localization in merozoite before/during invasion | Potential function | Feature/structure |
| MSP-1 | PF3D7_0930300 | N | Surface/complex shed during invasion with MSP1/19 EGF C-terminal domain retained in PV of ring stage | Putative Band 3 ligand; C-terminal double EGF domain redundant for divergent molecules: processed SUB1 and -2 | Two C-terminal EGF domains: compact side by side arrangement |
| MSP-2 | PF3D7_0206800 | N | Surface | Highly polymorphic; likely structural role as surface coat | Unordered repetitive structure |
| MSP-5 | PF3D7_0207000 | N | Surface | Not known | C-terminal EGF domain |
| MSP-4 | PF3D7_0206900.1 | Y | Surface | Not known | C-terminal EGF domain |
| MSP-10 | PF3D7_0620400 | N | Surface | Not known | C-terminal EGF domain |
| Pf12 | PF3D7_0612700 | Y | Surface/shed | Potential adhesive protein | 6-Cys domains |
| Pf38 | PF3D7_0508000 | Y | Surface/shed | Potential adhesive protein | 6-Cys domains |
| Pf92 | PF3D7_1364100 | Y | Surface/shed | Not known | Cys-rich protein |
| Pf113 | PF3D7_1420700 | N | Surface/shed | Not known | No data |
| MSP-9 (ABRA) | PF3D7_1228600 | Y | Surface/shed | Putative protease | No data |
| S-antigen | PF3D7_1035200 | N | Secreted into PV of schizont and released on egress | Not known; potential immunomodulatory role | Highly repetitive and diverse protein |
| GLURP | PF3D7_1035300 | Y | Secreted into PV of schizont and released on egress | Not known | Repetitive Glutamate-rich |
| MSP-3 | PF3D7_1035400 | Y | Surface/shed | Not known; binds to MSP-1 | Repetitive and Glutamate-rich |
| MSP-6 | PF3D7_1035500 | Y | Surface/shed | Not known; binds to MSP-1 | Leucine zipper-like C-terminal domain |
| H101 (MSP-11) | PF3D7_1035600 | Y | Surface/shed | Not known | MSP-3 family, leucine zipper-like C-terminal domain |
| H103 | PF3D7_1035900 | Y | Surface/shed | Not known | MSP-3 family, leucine zipper-like C-terminal domain |
| MSP-7 | PF3D7_1335100 | Y | Surface/shed | Associates with MSP-1, gene knockout in | No data |
| MSP-7-like (MSRP2) | PF3D7_1334800 | Y | Surface/shed | Not known; may associate with MSP-1 | MSP-7 family |
| MSPDBL-1 | PF3D7_1036300 | Y | Surface/shed | Binds to unknown receptor on red cell | Member of EBL family, DBL and leucine zipper-like domains |
| MSPDBL-2 | PF3D7_1035700 | Y | Surface/shed | Binds to unknown receptor on red cell | Member of EBL family, DBL and leucine zipper-like domains |
| SERA3 | PF3D7_0207800 | Y | Secreted into PV of schizont and released on egress | Cysteine protease domain with active site serine | Cysteine protease domain |
| SERA4 | PF3D7_0207700 | N | Most secreted into PV of schizont and released on egress | Cysteine protease domain with active site serine | Cysteine protease domain |
| SERA5 | PF3D7_0207600 | N | Secreted into PV of schizont and released on egress | Cysteine protease domain with active site serine | Cysteine protease domain |
| SERA6 | PF3D7_0207500 | N | Most secreted into PV of schizont and released on egress | Cysteine protease domain with active site cysteine | Cysteine protease domain |
| Pf41 | PF3D7_0404900 | Y | Surface/shed | Potential adhesive protein; binds Pf12 on merozoite | 6-Cys domains |
| ROM1 | PF3D7_1114100 | Y | Mononeme (proposed new apical organelle) or microneme/surface | Rhomboid protease; cleaves AMA1, MAEBL, EBLs, PfRh proteins; likely role after invasion in PV formation | Multipass transmembrane protein |
| ROM4 | PF3D7_0506900 | ND | Surface/shed | Rhomboid protease; cleaves AMA1, MTRAP, EBL, and PfRh proteins in transmembrane to allow shedding during invasion | Multipass transmembrane protein |
| AMA 1 | PF3D7_1133400 | N | Micronemes/surface and binds to RON2 that has been inserted into red cell membrane and tracks with tight junction | Released on merozoite surface; binds RON complex; potential ligand for McLeod antigen, phosphorylation of cytoplasmic tail essential, may be involved in signaling | PAN (plasminogen, apple, nematode) motifs |
| EBA-175 | PF3D7_0731500 | Y | Micronemes/surface and binds to glycophorin A | Binds to glycophorin A, likely signaling role for invasion | EBL family with DBL domains; “handshake” association between region II dimers creates groove for glycophorin A binding |
| EBA-181/JESEBL | PF3D7_0102500 | Y | Micronemes/surface and binds to unknown receptor | Binds to unknown receptor on red cell | EBL family member with DBL domains |
| EBA-140/BAEBL | PF3D7_1301600 | Y | Micronemes/surface and binds to glycophorin C | Binds to glycophorin C on red cell | EBL family member with DBL domains |
| EBL-1 | PF3D7_1371600 | Y | No data | Binds to glycophorin B, nonfunctional because of mutations causing truncated protein | EBL family member with DBL domains |
| PTRAMP | PF3D7_1218000 | ND | Not known; cleaved by SUB2 on merozoite surface | Long extended structure | |
| PfRipr | PF3D7_0323400 | N | Micronemes/surface and binds to PfRh5 | Binds to PfRh5 | 10 EGF domains, 87 cysteines |
| MTRAP | PF3D7_1028700 | N | Micronemes/PV | Potential motor-associated protein | Thrombospondin-like domains |
| PTRAMP | PF3D7_1218000 | N | Micronemes/surface | Potential motor-associated protein | Thrombospondin-like domains |
| SPATR | PF3D7_0405900 | ND | Micronemes/surface | Not known for blood stages | Thrombospondin-like domains |
| GAMA | PF3D7_0828800 | ND | Micronemes/surface | Binds to red cells; has GPI anchor | No data |
| SUB2 | PF3D7_1136900 | N | Micronemes/PV | Protease that processes MSP-1, MSP-6, MSP-7, AMA1, PTRAMP and other proteins to prime merozoite for invasion | Subtilisin-like serine protease |
| SUB1 | PF3D7_0507500 | N | Exonemes/PV | Protease that processes MSP-1, MSP-6, MSP-7, AMA1, RAP1, MSRP2 and SERAs to prime merozoite for invasion | Subtilisin-like serine protease |
| Rhoptry neck proteins | |||||
| PfRh1 | PF3D7_0402300 | Y | Rhoptry neck/surface | Binds to red cells via receptor Y | PfRh family |
| PfRh2a | PF3D7_1335400 | Y | Rhoptry neck/surface | Binds to red cells via receptor Z | PfRh family |
| PfRh2b | PF3D7_1335300 | Y | Rhoptry neck/surface | Binds to red cells via receptor Z | PfRh family |
| PfRh4 | PF3D7_0424200 | Y | Rhoptry neck/surface | Binds to red cells via complement receptor 1 | PfRh family |
| PfRh5 | PF3D7_0424100 | N | Rhoptry neck/surface forms complex with Ripr | Binds to red cells via Basigin | Classed as PfRh family but lacks homology and no transmembrane so likely functionally distinct |
| RON2 | PF3D7_1452000 | ND | Rhoptry neck/into red cell membrane | Inserted in red cell membrane at invasion, forms complex at tight junction with RON proteins and AMA-1 | Multipass transmembrane protein |
| RON3 | PF3D7_1252100 | ND | Rhoptry neck/into red cell | Likely also forms complex at tight junction with other RON proteins and AMA-1 | No data |
| RON4 | PF3D7_1116000 | ND | Rhoptry neck/into red cell | Injected into red cell, binds to RON2 and forms a complex at tight junction with RON proteins and AMA-1 | Binds to AMA1 via hydrophobic groove |
| RON5 | PF3D7_0817700 | ND | Rhoptry neck/into red cell | Forms complex at tight junction with RON proteins and AMA-1 | No data |
| ASP | PF3D7_0405900 | ND | Rhoptry neck/surface | Not known; has putative GPI anchor | Sushi domains |
N, knockout attempt unsuccessful; Y, knockout generated; ND, knockout not attempted; PV, parasitophorous vacuole; MSP, merozoite surface protein
EBL and PfRh families show overlap in function and, while individually nonessential, overall are essential.