AI Article Synopsis

  • Malaria symptoms arise when Plasmodium merozoites invade red blood cells, making erythrocyte invasion a key target for vaccine and drug development.
  • Recent studies indicate that antibodies against the PfMSA180 protein are linked to protection from symptomatic malaria, highlighting its potential as a vaccine target.
  • Research shows that the C-terminal region of PfMSA180, which binds to human integrin associated protein (CD47), is crucial for merozoite invasion and is associated with protective immune responses in malaria-exposed populations.

Article Abstract

Malaria symptoms and pathology are initiated by invasion of host erythrocytes by Plasmodium merozoites in a complex process that involves interactions between parasite and host erythrocyte proteins. Erythrocyte invasion presents attractive targets for malaria vaccine and drug development. Recently it was observed that antibodies against PfMSA180 (PF3D7_1014100) are associated with protection from symptomatic malaria, suggesting that this protein is a target of naturally acquired protective antibodies. Here we characterize PfMSA180, a ~170 kDa merozoite surface antigen that is potentially involved in erythrocyte invasion. PfMSA180 synthesized by the wheat germ cell-free system was used to raise antibodies in rabbits. Growth inhibition assays revealed that parasite invasion is inhibited by antibodies to the PfMSA180 C-terminal region, which contains an erythrocyte-binding domain. Surface plasmon resonance analysis showed that PfMSA180 specifically interacts with human erythrocyte integrin associated protein (CD47), suggesting that PfMSA180 plays a role during merozoite invasion of erythrocytes. Polymorphism analysis revealed that pfmsa180 is highly conserved among field isolates. We show that naturally acquired PfMSA180-specific antibodies responses are associated with protective immunity in a malaria-exposed Thai population. In sum, the data presented here supports further evaluation of the conserved erythrocyte-binding C-terminal region of PfMSA180 as an asexual blood-stage malaria vaccine candidate.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6459815PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-42366-9DOI Listing

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Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite responsible for severe malaria, develops within erythrocytes. Merozoite invasion and subsequent egress of intraerythrocytic parasites are essential for this erythrocytic cycle, parasite survival and pathogenesis. In the present study, we report the essential role of a novel protein, P.

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Article Synopsis
  • Malaria symptoms arise when Plasmodium merozoites invade red blood cells, making erythrocyte invasion a key target for vaccine and drug development.
  • Recent studies indicate that antibodies against the PfMSA180 protein are linked to protection from symptomatic malaria, highlighting its potential as a vaccine target.
  • Research shows that the C-terminal region of PfMSA180, which binds to human integrin associated protein (CD47), is crucial for merozoite invasion and is associated with protective immune responses in malaria-exposed populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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