Distinct roles of Plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis.
Invasion of host cells by the malaria parasite involves recognition and interaction with cell-surface receptors. A wide variety of parasite surface proteins participate in this process, most of which are specific to the parasite's particular invasive form. Upon entry, the parasite has to dissoc...
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2009-01-01
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doaj-a567e82e10de4029ac513051b88ac4442021-04-21T17:19:13ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742009-01-0151e100026210.1371/journal.ppat.1000262Distinct roles of Plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis.Prakash SrinivasanIsabelle CoppensMarcelo Jacobs-LorenaInvasion of host cells by the malaria parasite involves recognition and interaction with cell-surface receptors. A wide variety of parasite surface proteins participate in this process, most of which are specific to the parasite's particular invasive form. Upon entry, the parasite has to dissociate itself from the host-cell receptors. One mechanism by which it does so is by shedding its surface ligands using specific enzymes. Rhomboid belongs to a family of serine proteases that cleave cell-surface proteins within their transmembrane domains. Here we identify and partially characterize a Plasmodium berghei rhomboid protease (PbROM1) that plays distinct roles during parasite development. PbROM1 localizes to the surface of sporozoites after salivary gland invasion. In blood stage merozoites, PbROM1 localizes to the apical end where proteins involved in invasion are also present. Our genetic analysis suggests that PbROM1 functions in the invasive stages of parasite development. Whereas wild-type P. berghei is lethal to mice, animals infected with PbROM1 null mutants clear the parasites efficiently and develop long-lasting protective immunity. The results indicate that P. berghei Rhomboid 1 plays a nonessential but important role during parasite development and identify rhomboid proteases as potential targets for disease control.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/19148267/pdf/?tool=EBI |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Prakash Srinivasan Isabelle Coppens Marcelo Jacobs-Lorena |
spellingShingle |
Prakash Srinivasan Isabelle Coppens Marcelo Jacobs-Lorena Distinct roles of Plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis. PLoS Pathogens |
author_facet |
Prakash Srinivasan Isabelle Coppens Marcelo Jacobs-Lorena |
author_sort |
Prakash Srinivasan |
title |
Distinct roles of Plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis. |
title_short |
Distinct roles of Plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis. |
title_full |
Distinct roles of Plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis. |
title_fullStr |
Distinct roles of Plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Distinct roles of Plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis. |
title_sort |
distinct roles of plasmodium rhomboid 1 in parasite development and malaria pathogenesis. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS Pathogens |
issn |
1553-7366 1553-7374 |
publishDate |
2009-01-01 |
description |
Invasion of host cells by the malaria parasite involves recognition and interaction with cell-surface receptors. A wide variety of parasite surface proteins participate in this process, most of which are specific to the parasite's particular invasive form. Upon entry, the parasite has to dissociate itself from the host-cell receptors. One mechanism by which it does so is by shedding its surface ligands using specific enzymes. Rhomboid belongs to a family of serine proteases that cleave cell-surface proteins within their transmembrane domains. Here we identify and partially characterize a Plasmodium berghei rhomboid protease (PbROM1) that plays distinct roles during parasite development. PbROM1 localizes to the surface of sporozoites after salivary gland invasion. In blood stage merozoites, PbROM1 localizes to the apical end where proteins involved in invasion are also present. Our genetic analysis suggests that PbROM1 functions in the invasive stages of parasite development. Whereas wild-type P. berghei is lethal to mice, animals infected with PbROM1 null mutants clear the parasites efficiently and develop long-lasting protective immunity. The results indicate that P. berghei Rhomboid 1 plays a nonessential but important role during parasite development and identify rhomboid proteases as potential targets for disease control. |
url |
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/19148267/pdf/?tool=EBI |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT prakashsrinivasan distinctrolesofplasmodiumrhomboid1inparasitedevelopmentandmalariapathogenesis AT isabellecoppens distinctrolesofplasmodiumrhomboid1inparasitedevelopmentandmalariapathogenesis AT marcelojacobslorena distinctrolesofplasmodiumrhomboid1inparasitedevelopmentandmalariapathogenesis |
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