PLoS Pathogens 2013-01-01

DC8 and DC13 var genes associated with severe malaria bind avidly to diverse endothelial cells.

Marion Avril, Andrew J Brazier, Martin Melcher, Sowmya Sampath, Joseph D Smith

Index: PLoS Pathog. 9 , e1003430, (2013)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

During blood stage infection, Plasmodium falciparum infected erythrocytes (IE) bind to host blood vessels. This virulence determinant enables parasites to evade spleen-dependent killing mechanisms, but paradoxically in some cases may reduce parasite fitness by killing the host. Adhesion of infected erythrocytes is mediated by P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1), a family of polymorphic adhesion proteins encoded by var genes. Whereas cerebral binding and severe malaria are associated with parasites expressing DC8 and DC13 var genes, relatively little is known about the non-brain endothelial selection on severe malaria adhesive types. In this study, we selected P. falciparum-IEs on diverse endothelial cell types and demonstrate that DC8 and DC13 var genes were consistently among the major var transcripts selected on non-brain endothelial cells (lung, heart, bone marrow). To investigate the molecular basis for this avid endothelial binding activity, recombinant proteins were expressed from the predominant upregulated DC8 transcript, IT4var19. In-depth binding comparisons revealed that multiple extracellular domains from this protein bound brain and non-brain endothelial cells, and individual domains largely did not discriminate between different endothelial cell types. Additionally, we found that recombinant DC8 and DC13 CIDR1 domains exhibited a widespread endothelial binding activity and could compete for DC8-IE binding to brain endothelial cells, suggesting they may bind the same host receptor. Our findings provide new insights into the interaction of severe malaria adhesive types and host blood vessels and support the hypothesis that parasites causing severe malaria express PfEMP1 variants with a superior ability to adhere to diverse endothelial cell types, and may therefore endow these parasites with a growth and transmission advantage.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Measurement of separase proteolytic activity in single living cells by a fluorogenic flow cytometry assay.

2015-01-01

[PLoS ONE 10 , e0133769, (2015)]

The protective role of the Bowman-Birk protease inhibitor in soybean lunasin digestion: the effect of released peptides on colon cancer growth.

2015-08-01

[Food Funct. 6 , 2626-35, (2015)]

The Bowman-Birk inhibitor. Trypsin- and chymotrypsin-inhibitor from soybeans.

1985-02-01

[Int. J. Pept. Protein Res. 25 , 113, (1985)]

The cytotoxic effect of Bowman-Birk isoinhibitors, IBB1 and IBBD2, from soybean (Glycine max) on HT29 human colorectal cancer cells is related to their intrinsic ability to inhibit serine proteases.

2010-03-01

[Mol. Nutr. Food. Res. 54 , 396-405, (2010)]

Saliva proteins of vector Culicoides modify structure and infectivity of bluetongue virus particles.

2011-01-01

[PLoS ONE 6 , e17545, (2011)]

More Articles...