The role of protein phosphorylation in the life cycle of malaria parasites is slowly emerging. Here we combine global phospho-proteomic analysis with kinome-wide reverse genetics to assess the importance of protein phosphorylation in Plasmodium falciparum asexual proliferation. We identify 1177 phosphorylation sites on 650 parasite proteins that are involved in a wide range of general cellular activities such as DnA synthesis, transcription and metabolism as well as key parasite processes such as invasion and cyto-adherence. several parasite protein kinases are themselves phosphorylated on putative regulatory residues, including tyrosines in the activation loop of PfGsK3 and PfCLK3; we show that phosphorylation of PfCLK3 Y526 is essential for full kinase activity. A kinome-wide reverse genetics strategy identified 36 parasite kinases as likely essential for erythrocytic schizogony. These studies not only reveal processes that are regulated by protein phosphorylation, but also define potential anti-malarial drug targets within the parasite kinome.
Using three different Fcγ receptor (FcγR)-deficient mouse strains, we examined the induction of autoimmune hemolytic anemia by each of the four immunoglobulin (Ig)G isotype-switch variants of a 4C8 IgM antierythrocyte autoantibody and its relation to the contributions of the two FcγR, FcγRI, and FcγRIII, operative in the phagocytosis of opsonized particles. We found that the four IgG isotypes of this antibody displayed striking differences in pathogenicity, which were related to their respective capacity to interact in vivo with the two phagocytic FcγRs, defined as follows: IgG2a > IgG2b > IgG3/IgG1 for FcγRI, and IgG2a > IgG1 > IgG2b > IgG3 for FcγRIII. Accordingly, the IgG2a autoantibody exhibited the highest pathogenicity, ∼20–100-fold more potent than its IgG1 and IgG2b variants, respectively, while the IgG3 variant, which displays little interaction with these FcγRs, was not pathogenic at all. An unexpected critical role of the low-affinity FcγRIII was revealed by the use of two different IgG2a anti–red blood cell autoantibodies, which displayed a striking preferential utilization of FcγRIII, compared with the high-affinity FcγRI. This demonstration of the respective roles in vivo of four different IgG isotypes, and of two phagocytic FcγRs, in autoimmune hemolytic anemia highlights the major importance of the regulation of IgG isotype responses in autoantibody-mediated pathology and humoral immunity.
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