| Literature DB >> 28572796 |
Pragyan Acharya1, Manika Garg2, Praveen Kumar1, Akshay Munjal1, K D Raja1.
Abstract
The malaria parasite, Plasmodium, is one of the oldest parasites documented to infect humans and has proven particularly hard to eradicate. One of the major hurdles in designing an effective subunit vaccine against the malaria parasite is the insufficient understanding of host-parasite interactions within the human host during infections. The success of the parasite lies in its ability to evade the human immune system and recruit host responses as physiological cues to regulate its life cycle, leading to rapid acclimatization of the parasite to its immediate host environment. Hence understanding the environmental niche of the parasite is crucial in developing strategies to combat this deadly infectious disease. It has been increasingly recognized that interactions between parasite proteins and host factors are essential to establishing infection and virulence at every stage of the parasite life cycle. This review reassesses all of these interactions and discusses their clinical importance in designing therapeutic approaches such as design of novel vaccines. The interactions have been followed from the initial stages of introduction of the parasite under the human dermis until asexual and sexual blood stages which are essential for transmission of malaria. We further classify the interactions as "direct" or "indirect" depending upon their demonstrated ability to mediate direct physical interactions of the parasite with host factors or their indirect manipulation of the host immune system since both forms of interactions are known to have a crucial role during infections. We also discuss the many ways in which this understanding has been taken to the field and the success of these strategies in controlling human malaria.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium; cytokines; direct interaction; host–parasite interaction; indirect interaction; invasion; malaria; protein
Year: 2017 PMID: 28572796 PMCID: PMC5435807 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.00889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
List of Plasmodium proteins that interact with host and Plasmodium proteins and their functions.
| S.No. | Plasmodium protein | Interacting protein | Function | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Host | Parasite | ||||
| (1) | Skeleton binding protein 1 (SBP), | (1) 4.1R (2) Spectrin | Placement of PfEMP 1 from MC (Maurer’s cleft) to parasite-infected cell | ||
| (2) | CD55 | Not known | Not known | RBC invasion by merozoite | |
| (3) | PHIST | PfEMP1 (ATS) | ∗ | ||
| (4) | RESA | β spectrin | ∗ | ||
| (5) | MESA | Membrane domain of 4.1R | It is significant for the parasite growth in erythrocytes. | ||
| (6) | PfEMP1 | (1) Directly with Spectrin (2) Ankyrin (3) 4.1R | Indirectly via KAHRP | Lead to its attachment to the membrane of infected RBC | |
| (7) | MSP1 (fragments) | bind to the S100- protein (a proinflammatory cytokine) | Inhibition of NF-kb activation and blocking the inflammatory response | ||
| (8) | AMA1 | RON2 | Triggers the junction formation and lead to the invasion of parasite in RBCs. | ||
| (9) | ETRAM | (1) Host apolipoproteins | Parasite heat shock protein | Lead to presentation of PfEMP 1 to infected RBC | |
| (10) | CD81 | Not known | Not known | Hepatocyte invasion | |
| (11) | PfEMP3 | (1) Appears on cytoplasmic surface of the host cell membrane (2) 60-residue fragment (FIa1, residues 38–97) of PfEMP3 binds to spectrin | (1) PfEMP3 junctions of the membrane skeletal network (2) PfEMP3 fragment causes extensive reduction in shear resistance of the cell | ||
| (12) | CD68 | Not known | Not known | Sporozoite invasion | |
Summary of host receptors for PfEMP1 adhesion.
| Subclass of PfEMP1 binding domain | Host receptor | Effect on the host | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| CIDR-α and DBL-β | CD36 and ICAM-1 | Support adhesion to endothelia and platelet mediated clumping of infected RBCs | |
| DBL X and DBL-𝜀 | Placental receptor Chondroitin sulfate A | Placental sequestration of infected erythrocytes | |
| Not known | Receptors on surface of immune cells | May modulate function of immune cells and reduce immune response against parasite. | |
| DBL-α1 and DBL-α | Complement receptor 1(CR1), A and B blood group antigens and heparin sulfate like molecule | Rosetting; binding of infected erythrocytes to uninfected erythrocytes | |
| CIDR-α and DBL-2δ | VCAM-1, PECAM-1, NCAM-1, P-selectin, E-selectin | Modulates endothelial properties such as permeability, apoptosis, and inflammatory response |
List of cytokines, eNOS, NO with altered expressions in different condition of malaria.
| S.No. | Species | Cytokine UP(+) OR DOWN(-) | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | IL-17 + IFN-gamma + TGF-β | Alterations of blood viscosity Reduction of viscosity by IL-17-possible immunomodulator | ||
| (2) | TNF-alpha + IL-6 + | Significantly higher in severe malaria | ||
| (3) | IP-10 + TNF-R2 + | Significantly + in cerebral malaria | ||
| (4) | IL-8 + IL-15 + MCP-1 + Eotaxin | Poorly controlled inflammatory response determines a bad outcome | ||
| (5) | Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) (Glu2983Asp substitution and “C-b-Asp” haplotype) | Protective effects against cerebral malaria and that the presence of Asp at position 298 may influence eNOS expression and NO production by the “C-b” haplotype. | ||
| (6) | IL-10 | Proinflammatory | ||
| (7) | Nitric oxide (NO) | Increased NO production has been shown to be beneficial because of its antiparasitic and antidisease effect. Nitric oxide (NO) decreases erythropoiesis, and it is likely an important mediator of anemia of chronic disease |