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  3. Deletion of the rodent malaria ortholog for falcipain-1 highlights differences between hepatic and blood stage merozoites.
 

Deletion of the rodent malaria ortholog for falcipain-1 highlights differences between hepatic and blood stage merozoites.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.107199
Date of Publication
September 2017
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Zellbiol...

Author
Hopp, Christine S
Bennett, Brandy L
Mishra, Satish
Lehmann, Christine
Hanson, Kirsten K
Lin, Jing-Wen
Rousseau, Kimberly
Carvalho, Filomena A
van der Linden, Wouter A
Santos, Nuno C
Bogyo, Matthew
Khan, Shahid M
Heussler, Volkerorcid-logo
Institut für Zellbiologie (IZB)
Sinnis, Photini
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

600 - Technology::610...

Series
PLoS pathogens
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1553-7366
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1371/journal.ppat.1006586
PubMed ID
28922424
Description
Proteases have been implicated in a variety of developmental processes during the malaria parasite lifecycle. In particular, invasion and egress of the parasite from the infected hepatocyte and erythrocyte, critically depend on protease activity. Although falcipain-1 was the first cysteine protease to be characterized in P. falciparum, its role in the lifecycle of the parasite has been the subject of some controversy. While an inhibitor of falcipain-1 blocked erythrocyte invasion by merozoites, two independent studies showed that falcipain-1 disruption did not affect growth of blood stage parasites. To shed light on the role of this protease over the entire Plasmodium lifecycle, we disrupted berghepain-1, its ortholog in the rodent parasite P. berghei. We found that this mutant parasite displays a pronounced delay in blood stage infection after inoculation of sporozoites. Experiments designed to pinpoint the defect of berghepain-1 knockout parasites found that it was not due to alterations in gliding motility, hepatocyte invasion or liver stage development and that injection of berghepain-1 knockout merosomes replicated the phenotype of delayed blood stage growth after sporozoite inoculation. We identified an additional role for berghepain-1 in preparing blood stage merozoites for infection of erythrocytes and observed that berghepain-1 knockout parasites exhibit a reticulocyte restriction, suggesting that berghepain-1 activity broadens the erythrocyte repertoire of the parasite. The lack of berghepain-1 expression resulted in a greater reduction in erythrocyte infectivity in hepatocyte-derived merozoites than it did in erythrocyte-derived merozoites. These observations indicate a role for berghepain-1 in processing ligands important for merozoite infectivity and provide evidence supporting the notion that hepatic and erythrocytic merozoites, though structurally similar, are not identical.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/155700
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Hopp PP 2017.pdftextAdobe PDF32.49 MBpublishedOpen
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