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Plasmodium liver stage developmental arrest by depletion of a protein at the parasite-host interface
Authors:Mueller Ann-Kristin  Camargo Nelly  Kaiser Karine  Andorfer Cathy  Frevert Ute  Matuschewski Kai  Kappe Stefan H I
Affiliation:Department of Parasitology, Heidelberg University School of Medicine, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
Abstract:Plasmodium parasites of mammals, including the species that cause malaria in humans, infect the liver first and develop there into clinically silent liver stages. Liver stages grow and ultimately produce thousands of first-generation merozoites, which initiate the erythrocytic cycles causing malaria pathology. Here, we present a Plasmodium protein with a critical function for complete liver stage development. UIS4 (up-regulated in infective sporozoites gene 4) is expressed exclusively in infective sporozoites and developing liver stages, where it localizes to the parasitophorous vacuole membrane. Targeted gene disruption of UIS4 in the rodent model malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei generated knockout parasites that progress through the malaria life cycle until after hepatocyte invasion but are severely impaired in further liver stage development. Immunization with UIS4 knockout sporozoites completely protects mice against subsequent infectious WT sporozoite challenge. Genetically attenuated liver stages may thus induce immune responses, which inhibit subsequent infection of the liver with WT parasites.
Keywords:attenuated parasite   malaria   parasitophorous vacuole   stage-specific gene expression
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