Erythrocyte invasion is central to malaria parasite replication and virulence. Plasmodium falciparum parasites use different alternative erythrocyte receptors and vary in expression of erythrocyte-binding antigenic (EBA) proteins and reticulocyte-binding protein homologues (Rh). Parasite invasion phenotypes and schizont-stage transcript expression profiles of the 8 eba and Rh protein-coding genes without internal stop codons were determined for 163 clinical isolates cultured ex vivo in The Gambia. There was extensive diversity in ability to invade erythrocytes treated with neuraminidase, trypsin, or chymotrypsin, and severe malaria isolates were less restricted by trypsin treatment than were mild malaria isolates (P = .015). Expression profiles of the eba and Rh genes showed distinct clusters indicating coordinated alternative transcription. The most divergent of 5 major clusters was dominated by Rh2b, with virtually no expression of eba175 or eba140 genes (which were dominant in the other 4 clusters). Particular transcripts were significantly correlated with parasitemia (Rh5 was positively correlated and eba140 negatively correlated; P < .01 for both) and age of patients (eba181 was positively correlated and eba175 negatively correlated; P < .001 for both) but not with invasion phenotypes or severity of malaria. Severe and mild malaria isolates were also evenly represented across the different expression clusters.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/649902DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

malaria isolates
12
erythrocyte invasion
8
severe mild
8
plasmodium falciparum
8
invasion phenotypes
8
expression profiles
8
profiles eba
8
mild malaria
8
positively correlated
8
negatively correlated
8

Similar Publications

Malaria remains a global health concern, with 249 million cases and 608,000 deaths being reported by the WHO in 2022. Traditional diagnostic methods often struggle with inconsistent stain quality, lighting variations, and limited resources in endemic regions, making manual detection time-intensive and error-prone. This study introduces an automated system for analyzing Romanowsky-stained thick blood smears, focusing on image quality evaluation, leukocyte detection, and malaria parasite classification.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Malaria, caused by species and transmitted by mosquitoes, continues to pose a significant global health threat. Pipecolisporin, a cyclic hexapeptide isolated from , has emerged as a promising antimalarial candidate due to its potent biological activity and stability. This study explores the synthesis, antimalarial activity, and computational studies of pipecolisporin, aiming to better understand its therapeutic potential.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vesicular mechanisms of drug resistance in apicomplexan parasites.

Microbiol Mol Biol Rev

January 2025

Special Centre for Molecular Medicine, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India.

Vesicular mechanisms of drug resistance are known to exist across prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Vesicles are sacs that form when a lipid bilayer 'bends' to engulf and isolate contents from the cytoplasm or extracellular environment. They have a wide range of functions, including vehicles of communication within and across cells, trafficking of protein intermediates to their rightful organellar destinations, and carriers of substrates destined for autophagy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reproducibly assessing malaria exposure is critical for force health protection for military service members deployed to malaria-endemic regions as well as for civilians making public health decisions and evaluating malaria eradication efforts. However, malaria disease surveillance is challenged by under-reporting, natural immunity, and chemoprophylaxis, which can mask malaria exposure and lead to an underestimation of malaria prevalence. In this study, we determined the feasibility of using a serosurveillance-based approach to measure Anopheles vector exposure, Plasmodium sporozoite exposure, and blood-stage parasitemia using a multiplex serological panel.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Emoquine-1: A Hybrid Molecule Efficient against Multidrug-Resistant Parasites, Including the Artemisinin-Resistant Quiescent Stage, and Also Active In Vivo.

J Med Chem

January 2025

Laboratoire de Chimie de Coordination du CNRS, LCC-CNRS, Inserm ERL 1289 MAAP, Université de Toulouse, 205 route de Narbonne, 31077 Toulouse cedex, France.

To challenge the multidrug resistance of malaria parasites, new hybrid compounds were synthesized and evaluated against laboratory strains and multidrug-resistant clinical isolates. Among these hybrids, emoquine-1 was the most active on proliferative , with IC values in the range of 20-55 nM and a high selectivity index with respect to mammalian cells. This drug retained its activity on several multiresistant field isolates from Cambodia and Guiana, exhibited no cross-resistance to artemisinin, and is also very active against the quiescent stage of the artemisinin-resistant parasites, three features that constitute the gold standard for new antimalarial drugs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!