| Literature DB >> 28698207 |
Varakorn Kosaisavee1,2, Rossarin Suwanarusk3,4, Adeline C Y Chua4, Dennis E Kyle5, Benoit Malleret2,3, Rou Zhang2, Mallika Imwong6, Rawiwan Imerbsin7, Ratawan Ubalee8, Hugo Sámano-Sánchez2, Bryan K S Yeung9, Jessica J Y Ong4, Eric Lombardini7, François Nosten10,11, Kevin S W Tan2, Pablo Bifani9, Georges Snounou12,13, Laurent Rénia3, Bruce Russell4.
Abstract
Two malaria parasites of Southeast Asian macaques, Plasmodium knowlesi and P cynomolgi, can infect humans experimentally. In Malaysia, where both species are common, zoonotic knowlesi malaria has recently become dominant, and cases are recorded throughout the region. By contrast, to date, only a single case of naturally acquired P cynomolgi has been found in humans. In this study, we show that whereas P cynomolgi merozoites invade monkey red blood cells indiscriminately in vitro, in humans, they are restricted to reticulocytes expressing both transferrin receptor 1 (Trf1 or CD71) and the Duffy antigen/chemokine receptor (DARC or CD234). This likely contributes to the paucity of detectable zoonotic cynomolgi malaria. We further describe postinvasion morphologic and rheologic alterations in P cynomolgi-infected human reticulocytes that are strikingly similar to those observed for P vivax These observations stress the value of P cynomolgi as a model in the development of blood stage vaccines against vivax malaria.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28698207 PMCID: PMC5600141 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2017-02-764787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113