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1.
Malaria parasites make specific receptor-ligand interactions to invade erythrocytes. A 175 kDa Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte binding antigen (EBA-175) binds sialic acid residues on glycophorin A during invasion of human erythrocytes. The receptor-binding domain of EBA-175 lies in a conserved, amino-terminal, cysteine-rich region, region F2 of EBA-175 (PfF2), that is homologous to the binding domains of other erythrocyte binding proteins such as Plasmodium vivax Duffy binding protein. We have developed methods to produce recombinant PfF2 in its functional form. Recombinant PfF2 was expressed in Escherichia coli, purified from inclusion bodies, renatured by oxidative refolding and purified to homogeneity by ion-exchange and gel filtration chromatography. Refolded PfF2 has been characterized using biochemical and biophysical methods and shown to be pure, homogenous and functional in that it binds human erythrocytes with specificity. Immunization with refolded PfF2 yields high titre antibodies that efficiently inhibit P. falciparum invasion of erythrocytes in vitro. Importantly, antibodies raised against PfF2 block invasion by a P. falciparum field isolate that invades erythrocytes using multiple pathways. These observations support the development of recombinant PfF2 as a vaccine candidate for P. falciparum malaria.  相似文献   

2.
The 175-kDa erythrocyte binding protein (EBA-175) of Plasmodium falciparum and Duffy antigen binding proteins of P. vivax and P. knowlesi are members of a protein family. The features of this protein family include a cysteine-rich motif present in the erythrocyte receptor-binding domain. We identify here a novel 140-kDa P. falciparum erythrocyte binding protein (EBP2/BAEBL) containing the signature cysteine-rich motif by comparative analysis of gene sequence information. Polyclonal antibodies generated by immunization with an EBP2/BAEBL DNA vaccine immunoprecipitated a 140-kDa protein from P. falciparum schizont-infected erythrocyte lysates. Similar to EBA-175, the binding of EBP2/BAEBL to human erythrocytes was dependent on sialic acids because neuraminidase treatment of those erythrocytes rendered them incapable of binding, but differed from EBA-175 in that trypsin treatment decreased EBP2/BAEBL binding by only twofold compared to a 10-fold reduction in EBA-175 binding. Antibodies raised against the putative erythrocyte-binding domain of EBP2/BAEBL effectively blocked the binding of native EBP2/BAEBL to erythrocytes. These functional antibodies localize EBP2/BAEBL to the invasive apical end of the merozoite. We identify EBP2/BAEBL as a paralogue of EBA-175 and as a novel P. falciparum vaccine candidate.  相似文献   

3.
EBA-175 of Plasmodium falciparum is a merozoite ligand that binds its receptor glycophorin A on erythrocytes during invasion. The ligand-receptor interaction is dependent on sialic acids as well as the protein backbone of glycophorin A. Region II (RII) of EBA-175 has been defined as the receptor-binding domain. RII is divided into regions F1 and F2, which contain duplicated cysteine motifs. We expressed RII in a baculovirus and show that RII binds erythrocytes with a specificity identical to that of the native protein. We found that, consistent with the binding of erythrocytes to COS cells expressing F2, recombinant baculovirus-expressed F2 bound erythrocytes. About 20% of all baculovirus-expressed RII is N-glycosylated, unlike native P. falciparum proteins that remain essentially unglycosylated. However, glycosylation of recombinant RII did not affect its immunogenicity. Antibodies raised against both glycosylated and unglycosylated baculovirus-expressed RII recognized P. falciparum schizonts in immunofluorescence assays and also gave similar enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay titers. Furthermore, these antibodies have similar abilities to block native EBA-175 binding to erythrocytes. These results allow the development of RII as a vaccine candidate for preclinical assessment.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Sialic acid on human erythrocytes is involved in invasion by the human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. Mouse erythrocytes were used as a reagent to explore the question of whether erythrocyte sialic acid functions as a nonspecific negative charge or whether the sialic acid is a necessary structural part of the receptor for merozoites. Human erythrocytes contain N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac), whereas mouse erythrocytes, which are also invaded by P. falciparum merozoites, contain 9-O-acetyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5,9Ac2) and N-glycoloylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc), in addition to Neu5Ac. We compared the effects of sialidase and influenza C virus esterase treatments of mouse erythrocytes on invasion and the binding of a 175-kDa P. falciparum protein (EBA-175), a sialic acid-dependent malaria ligand implicated in the invasion process. Sialidase-treated mouse erythrocytes were refractory to invasion by P. falciparum merozoites and failed to bind EBA-175. Influenza C virus esterase, which converts Neu5,9Ac2 to Neu5Ac, increased both invasion efficiency and EBA-175 binding to mouse erythrocytes. Thus, the parasite and EBA-175 discriminate between Neu5Ac and Neu5,9Ac2, that is, the C-9 acetyl group interferes with EBA-175 binding and invasion by P. falciparum merozoites. This indicates that sialic acid is part of a receptor for invasion.  相似文献   

6.
The 175-kDa Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte binding protein (EBA-175) binds to its receptor, sialic acids on glycophorin A. The binding region within EBA-175 is a cysteine-rich region identified as region II. Antibodies against region II block the binding of native EBA-175 to erythrocytes. We identified a P. falciparum strain, FVO, that could not invade erythrocytes devoid of sialic acids due to prior neuraminidase treatment, and in addition, we used a strain, 3D7, that could invade such sialic acid-depleted erythrocytes. We used these two strains to study the capacity of anti-region II antibodies to inhibit FVO and 3D7 parasite development in vitro. Analysis of growth-inhibitory effects of purified FVO anti-region II immunoglobulin G (IgG) with the FVO and 3D7 strains resulted in similar levels of growth inhibition. FVO and 3D7 strains were inhibited between 28 and 56% compared to control IgG. There appeared to be no intracellular growth retardation or killing of either isolate, suggesting that invasion was indeed inhibited. Incubation of recombinant region II with anti-region II IgG reversed the growth inhibition. These results suggest that antibodies against region II can also interfere with merozoite invasion pathways that do not involve sialic acids. The fact that EBA-175 has such a universal and yet susceptible role in erythrocyte invasion clearly supports its inclusion in a multivalent malaria vaccine.  相似文献   

7.
The blood-stage development of malaria parasites is initiated by the invasion of merozoites into susceptible erythrocytes. Specific receptor-ligand interactions must occur for the merozoites to first attach to and then invade erythrocytes. Because the invasion process is essential for the parasite's survival and the merozoite adhesion molecules are exposed on the merozoite surface during invasion, these adhesion molecules are candidates for antibody-dependent malaria vaccines. The Duffy binding protein of Plasmodium vivax belongs to a family of erythrocyte-binding proteins that contain functionally conserved cysteine-rich regions. The amino cysteine-rich regions of these homologous erythrocyte-binding proteins were recently identified for P. vivax, Plasmodium knowlesi, and Plasmodium falciparum as the principal erythrocyte-binding domains (C. Chitnis and L. H. Miller, J. Exp. Med. 180:497-506, 1994, and B. K. L. Sim, C. E. Chitnis, K. Wasniowska, T. J. Hadley, and L. H. Miller, Science 264:1941-1944, 1994). We report that amino acids in this critical ligand domain of the P. vivax Duffy binding protein are hypervariable, but this variability is limited. Hypervariability of the erythrocyte-binding domain suggests that this domain is the target of an effective immune response, but conservation of amino acid substitutions indicates that functional constraints limit this variation. In addition, the amino cysteine-rich region and part of the hydrophilic region immediately following it were the site of repeated homologous recombinations as represented by tandem repeat sequence polymorphisms. Similar polymorphisms have been identified in the same region of the homologous genes of P. falciparum and P. knowlesi, suggesting that there is a common mechanism of recombination or gene conversion that occurs in these Plasmodium genes.  相似文献   

8.
The erythrocyte binding antigen EBA-175 is a 175-kDa Plasmodium falciparum protein which mediates merozoite invasion of erythrocytes in a sialic acid-dependent manner. The purpose of this study was to produce recombinant EBA-175 polypeptide domains which have previously been identified as being involved in the interaction of EBA-175 with erythrocytes and to determine whether these polypeptides are recognized by malaria-specific antibodies. The eba-175 gene was cloned by PCR from genomic DNA isolated from the 3D7 strain of P. falciparum. The predicted protein sequence was highly conserved with that predicted from the published eba-175 gene sequences from the Camp and FCR-3 strains of P. falciparum and contained the F segment divergent region. Purified recombinant EBA-175 polypeptide fragments, expressed as glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins in insect cells by using the baculovirus system, were recognized by antibodies present in serum from a drug-cured, malaria-immune Aotus nancymai monkey. The fusion proteins were also recognized by antibodies present in sera from individuals residing in areas where malaria is endemic. In both cases the antibodies specifically recognized the EBA-175 polypeptide portion of the fusion proteins. Antibodies raised in rabbits immunized with the recombinant fusion proteins recognized parasite proteins present in schizont-infected erythrocytes. Our results suggest that these regions of the EBA-175 protein are targets for the immune response against malaria and support their further study as possible vaccine components.  相似文献   

9.
EBA-175 is a Plasmodium falciparum micronemal protein that binds to sialic acid in the context of the peptide backbone of glycophorin A and has been implicated in sialic acid-dependent invasion of erythrocytes. The existence of an alternative invasion pathway has been suggested by the finding that the P. falciparum clone Dd2/Nm can invade sialic acid-depleted erythrocytes. To study the role of EBA-175 in this alternative pathway, we have generated Dd2/Nm clones expressing a truncated form of EBA-175 that lacks region 6 and the cytoplasmic domain. The protein still appears to be localized to the apical end in the vicinity of the micronemes, suggesting that region 6 and the cytoplasmic domain are not involved in EBA-175 trafficking to the micronemes. In these genetically modified clones, the level of truncated EBA-175 protein expression was greatly reduced. EBA-175-disrupted clones displayed normal rates of invasion of untreated and enzyme-treated human and animal erythrocytes, suggesting a lack of involvement of EBA-175 in this alternative invasion pathway.  相似文献   

10.
Cloning of the Plasmodium vivax Duffy receptor.   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium knowlesi merozoites invade only Duffy blood group-positive human erythrocytes. Soluble P. vivax and P. knowlesi merozoite proteins of 135 kDa bind specifically to Duffy blood group determinants. The gene encoding a member of the Duffy receptor gene family of P. knowlesi has been cloned. We report here the molecular cloning of the presumptive Duffy receptor gene of P. vivax, using the P. knowlesi gene as a probe. There is a single gene in P. vivax which codes for a protein of 1115 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence predicts a putative signal sequence at the amino-terminus and a transmembrane region followed by 45 amino acids at the carboxy-terminus. The three introns found at the 3' end of the P. knowlesi gene were conserved in P. vivax, including high homology for the sequences of the introns. Comparison of the portion of the proteins amino to the transmembrane region between P. vivax and the partial sequence of P. knowlesi indicated at least three domains. Two homologous regions were separated by a non-homologous region. The cysteines in the homologous regions were conserved in number and position, indicating that the folding is similar and suggesting that these regions may be the Duffy blood group binding domains. In both P. vivax and P. knowlesi, the non-homologous region is hydrophilic and proline-rich, although the position of the prolines is not conserved. As prolines tend to stiffen a protein, this region may act as a 'hinge region' similar to those in the immunoglobulin gene family.  相似文献   

11.
Plasmodium falciparum causes the most virulent form of malaria and remains a major worldwide health problem. The erythrocytic development of P. falciparum relies on parasite invasion of host erythrocytes, a process mediated in part by the interaction of erythrocyte binding antigen 175 (EBA-175) with the erythrocyte receptor glycophorin A (GA). The binding domain of EBA-175 that interacts with glycophorin A is a approximately 330 residues module called F2. Several studies have shown that F2 recognizes both sialic acids and the protein backbone on glycophorin A. Here, we have developed ELISA-based quantitative F2-GA binding assays. We also performed a series of competitive inhibition assays to block the F2-GA interaction using a variety of sialic acid analogs. Our data show that both 2,3-didehydro-2-deoxy-N-acetyl neuraminic acid (DANA) and 3'-N-acetyl neuraminyl-N-acetyl lactosamine are excellent inhibitors of the F2-GA interaction. Moderate levels of inhibition were also observed with monomers or oligomers of N-acetyl neuraminic acid (sialic acid). Furthermore, we show that DANA is able to significantly inhibit the invasion of erythrocytes by P. falciparum. Together, our ELISA-based binding assays and in vitro inhibition of erythrocyte invasion data suggest that small variations in the structures of DANA and related inhibitors can result in even more potent invasion inhibitory activities. Our studies provide a platform for the development of high potency inhibitors of the F2-GA interaction using high throughput drug discovery technologies. Such compounds may form part of inhibitor cocktails, which aim to block invasion of erythrocytes by P. falciparum.  相似文献   

12.
The Plasmodium falciparum Erythrocyte Binding Antigen-175, EBA-175, is a soluble merozoite stage parasite protein which binds to glycophorin A surface receptors on human erythrocytes. We have expressed two conserved cysteine-rich regions, region II and region VI, of this protein as soluble His-tagged polypeptides in insect cell culture, and have tested their function in erythrocyte and glycophorin A binding assays. Recombinant region II polypeptides comprised of the F2 sub-domain or the entire region II (F1 and F2 sub-domains together) bound to erythrocytes and to purified glycophorin A in a manner similar to the binding of native P. falciparum EBA-175 to human red cells. Removal of sialic acid residues from the red cell surface totally abolished recombinant region II binding, while trypsin treatment of the erythrocyte surface reduced but did not eliminate recombinant region II binding. Synthetic peptides from three discontinuous regions of the F2 sub-domain of region II inhibited human erythrocyte cell binding and glycophorin A receptor recognition. Immune sera raised against EBA-175 recombinant proteins recognized native P. falciparum-derived EBA-175, and sera from malaria-immune adults recognized recombinant antigens attesting to both the antigenicity and immunogenicity of proteins. These results suggest that the functionally-active recombinant region II domain of EBA-175 may be an attractive candidate for inclusion in multi-component asexual blood stage vaccines.  相似文献   

13.
In vitro experimentation with Plasmodium falciparum has determined that a number of different receptor-ligand interactions are involved in the invasion of erythrocytes. Most culture-adapted parasite isolates use a mechanism of invasion that depends primarily on the erythrocyte sialoglycoprotein glycophorin A (GYPA) and erythrocyte-binding antigen 175 (EBA-175) of the parasite blood-stage merozoite. However, a minority of culture-adapted parasites and a majority of Indian field isolates can apparently invade by other means. Here, erythrocyte invasion phenotypes of P. falciparum field isolates in Africa were studied. For 38 Gambian isolates, invasion of neuraminidase-treated and trypsin-treated erythrocytes was inhibited, on average, by more than 60 and 85%, respectively, indicating a high level of dependence on sialic acid and trypsin-sensitive proteins on the erythrocyte surface. These results support the hypothesis that African P. falciparum parasites use GYPA as a primary receptor for invasion. However, the considerable variation among isolates confirms the idea that alternative receptors are also used by many parasites. Three amino acid polymorphisms in the GYPA-binding region of EBA-175 (region II) were not significantly associated with invasion phenotype. There was variation among isolates in the selectivity index (i.e., a statistical tendency toward aggregation or multiple invasions of host erythrocytes), but this variation did not correlate with enzyme-determined invasion phenotype or with eba-175 alleles. Overall, these invasion phenotypes in Africa support a vaccine strategy of inhibiting EBA-175 binding to GYPA but suggest that parasites with alternative phenotypes would be selected for if this strategy were used alone.  相似文献   

14.
Identification of Plasmodium knowlesi erythrocyte binding proteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Plasmodium knowlesi, a malaria of Old World monkeys, invades all Duffy blood group positive human erythrocytes and various New World monkey erythrocytes except Cebus apella. We had previously identified a 135 kDa parasite protein in supernatants of P. knowlesi cultures that bound to Duffy positive but not to Duffy negative human erythrocytes [Haynes et al., J. Exp. Med. 167, 1873-1881 (1988)]. We now use New World monkey erythrocytes as a reagent to identify P. knowlesi proteins in culture supernatants that will bind to all New World monkey erythrocytes susceptible to invasion but not to C. apella erythrocytes, which are refractory to invasion. The 135 kDa protein binds to all New World monkey erythrocytes, including C. appella. Another protein of 155 kDa binds to all New World monkey erythrocytes except C. apella. The 155 kDa protein binds to Old World monkey erythrocytes, the natural host of P. knowlesi; it does not bind to human Duffy positive erythrocytes. This and the previous study are the beginning of the identification of parasite proteins of P. knowlesi that bind to erythrocytes in a receptor specific manner.  相似文献   

15.
The Plasmodium vivax Duffy binding protein (DBP) binds to the Duffy blood group antigen on the surface of erythrocytes and is essential for invasion. Natural immunity develops to this protein making it an important vaccine candidate. Genetic diversity within and between populations was compared in 100 dbp sequences from isolates obtained from Papua New Guinea, Colombia, and South Korea. The cysteine-rich region II, that contains the binding domain, has the highest diversity compared to the rest of the dbp gene and appears to be under strong selective pressure based on statistical tests comparing rates of non-synonymous (K(n)) to synonymous mutations (K(s)) among P. vivax isolates and to those of closely related species. By contrast, meiotic recombination was not found to be significant for maintaining genetic diversity. A comparison of the patterns of nucleotide diversity within dbpII to that of genes encoding homologous erythrocyte binding proteins of Plasmodium knowlesi predict critical binding residues juxtaposed to polymorphic B- and T-cell epitopes. Phylogenic analysis and measurement of nucleotide diversity between and within the different geographic populations support emergence of distinct allelic families suggestive of divergent selection of alleles between populations. Development of a P. vivax DBP-based vaccine must take into account regions of high diversity within the molecule and alleles that show distinct geographic differences.  相似文献   

16.
Malaria is one of the deadliest human diseases and efforts to control it have been difficult due to the protozoan parasites' complex biology. Malaria merozoite invasion of erythrocytes is an essential part of blood-stage infections. The invasion process is mediated by numerous parasite molecules, such as EBA-175, a member of the ebl family of erythrocyte binding proteins. We have identified maebl, an ebl paralogue, in Plasmodium falciparum and found it highly conserved with its orthologues in P. yoelii and P. berghei, but distinct from other Plasmodium ebl. Importantly, the putative MAEBL ligand domains are highly conserved and are similar to AMA-1, but not the consensus DBL ligand domains present in all other ebl. In mature merozoites, MAEBL localized with rhoptry proteins (RhopH2, RAP-1), including surface localization with RhopH2, but not microneme proteins (EBA-175, BAEBL). MAEBL appears as proteolytically processed fragments in P. falciparum parasites. The amino cysteine-rich ligand domains were present primarily in culture supernatants, while the carboxyl cysteine-rich domain adjacent to the transmembrane domain was preferentially isolated from Triton X-100 extracted fractions. These data indicate that the primary structure of maebl is highly conserved among Plasmodium species, while its characteristics demonstrate a function unique among the ebl proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Region II of the 175-kDa erythrocyte-binding antigen (EBA-175RII) of Plasmodium falciparum is functionally important in sialic acid-dependent erythrocyte invasion and is considered a prime target for an invasion-blocking vaccine. The objectives of this study were to (i) determine the prevalence of anti-EBA-175RII antibodies in a naturally exposed population, (ii) determine whether naturally acquired antibodies have a functional role by inhibiting binding of EBA-175RII to erythrocytes, and (iii) determine whether antibodies against EBA-175RII correlate with immunity to clinical malaria. We treated 301 lifelong residents of an area of malaria holoendemicity in western Kenya for malaria, monitored them during a high-transmission season, and identified 33 individuals who were asymptomatic despite parasitemia (clinically immune). We also identified 50 clinically susceptible individuals to serve as controls. These 83 individuals were treated and monitored again during the subsequent low-transmission season. Anti-EBA-175RII antibodies were present in 98.7% of the individuals studied. The antibody levels were relatively stable between the beginning and end of the high-transmission season and correlated with the plasma EBA-175RII erythrocyte-binding-inhibitory activity. There was no difference in anti-EBA-175RII levels or plasma EBA-175RII erythrocyte-binding-inhibitory activity between clinically immune and clinically susceptible groups. However, these parameters were higher in nonparasitemic than in parasitemic individuals at enrollment. These results suggest that although antibodies against EBA-175RII may be effective in suppressing some of the wild parasite strains, EBA-175RII is unlikely to be effective as a monovalent vaccine against malaria, perhaps due to allelic heterogeneity and/or presence of sialic acid-independent strains.  相似文献   

18.
We have produced two synthetic genes that code for the F2 domain located within region II of the 175-kDa Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte binding antigen (EBA-175) to determine the effects of codon alteration on protein expression in homologous and heterologous host systems. EBA-175 plays a key role in the process of merozoite invasion into erythrocytes through a specific receptor-ligand interaction. The F2 domain of EBA-175 is the ligand that binds to the glycophorin A receptor on human erythrocytes and is therefore a target of vaccine development efforts. We designed synthetic genes based on P. falciparum, Escherichia coli, and Pichia codon usage and expressed recombinant F2 in E. coli and Pichia pastoris. Compared to the expression of the native F2 sequence, conversion to prokaryote (E. coli)- or eukaryote (Pichia)-based codon usage dramatically improved the levels of recombinant protein expression in both E. coli and P. pastoris. The majority of the protein expressed in E. coli, however, was produced as inclusion bodies. The protein expressed in P. pastoris, on the other hand, was expressed as a secreted, soluble protein. The P. pastoris-produced protein was superior to that produced in E. coli based on its ability to bind to red blood cells. Consistent with these observations, the antibodies generated against the Pichia-produced protein prevented the binding of recombinant EBA to red blood cells. These antibodies recognize EBA-175 present on merozoites as well as in sporozoites by immunofluorescence. Our results suggest that the Pichia-based EBA-F2 vaccine construct has further potential to be developed for clinical use.  相似文献   

19.
Plasmodium falciparum utilizes multiple ligand-receptor interactions for invasion. The invasion ligand EBA-175 is being developed as a major blood-stage vaccine candidate. EBA-175 mediates parasite invasion of host erythrocytes in a sialic acid-dependent manner through its binding to the erythrocyte receptor glycophorin A. In this study, we addressed the ability of naturally acquired human antibodies against the EBA-175 RII erythrocyte-binding domain to inhibit parasite invasion of ex vivo isolates, in relationship to the sialic acid dependence of these parasites. We have determined the presence of antibodies to the EBA-175 RII domain by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in individuals from areas of Senegal where malaria is endemic with high and low transmission. Using affinity-purified human antibodies to the EBA-175 RII domain from pooled patient plasma, we have measured the invasion pathway as well as the invasion inhibition of clinical isolates from Senegalese patients in ex vivo assays. Our results suggest that naturally acquired anti-EBA-175 RII antibodies significantly inhibit invasion of Senegalese parasites and that these responses can be significantly enhanced through limiting other ligand-receptor interactions. However, the extent of this functional inhibition by EBA-175 antibodies is not associated with the sialic acid dependence of the parasite strain, suggesting that erythrocyte invasion pathway usage by parasite strains is not driven by antibodies targeting the EBA-175/glycophorin A interaction. This work has implications for vaccine design based on the RII domain of EBA-175 in the context of alternative invasion pathways.  相似文献   

20.
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