BackgroundMalaria remains a major human health problem, with no licensed vaccine currently available. Malaria infections initiate when infectious Plasmodium sporozoites are transmitted by Anopheline mosquitoes during their blood meal. Investigations of the malaria sporozoite are, therefore, of clear medical importance. However, sporozoites can only be produced in and isolated from mosquitoes, and their isolation results in large amounts of accompanying mosquito debris and contaminating microbes.MethodsHere is described a discontinuous density gradient purification method for Plasmodium sporozoites that maintains parasite infectivity in vitro and in vivo and greatly reduces mosquito and microbial contaminants.ResultsThis method provides clear advantages over previous approaches: it is rapid, requires no serum components, and can be scaled to purify >107 sporozoites with minimal operator involvement. Moreover, it can be effectively applied to both human (Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium vivax) and rodent (Plasmodium yoelii) infective species with excellent recovery rates.ConclusionsThis novel method effectively purifies viable malaria sporozoites by greatly reducing contaminating mosquito debris and microbial burdens associated with parasite isolation. Large-scale preparations of purified sporozoites will allow for enhanced in vitro infections, proteomics, and biochemical characterizations. In conjunction with aseptic mosquito rearing techniques, this purification technique will also support production of live attenuated sporozoites for vaccination.
Mutations in the Plasmodium falciparum Kelch 13 (PfK13) protein are associated with artemisinin resistance. PfK13 is essential for asexual erythrocytic development, but its function is not known. We tagged the PfK13 protein with green fluorescent protein in P. falciparum to study its expression and localization in asexual and sexual stages. We used a new antibody against PfK13 to show that the PfK13 protein is expressed ubiquitously in both asexual erythrocytic stages and gametocytes and is localized in punctate structures, partially overlapping an endoplasmic reticulum marker. We introduced into the 3D7 strain four PfK13 mutations (F446I, N458Y, C469Y, and F495L) identified in parasites from the China-Myanmar border area and characterized the in vitro artemisinin response phenotypes of the mutants. We found that all the parasites with the introduced PfK13 mutations showed higher survival rates in the ring-stage survival assay (RSA) than the wild-type (WT) control, but only parasites with N458Y displayed a significantly higher RSA value (26.3%) than the WT control. After these PfK13 mutations were reverted back to the WT in field parasite isolates, all revertant parasites except those with the C469Y mutation showed significantly lower RSA values than their respective parental isolates. Although the 3D7 parasites with introduced F446I, the predominant PfK13 mutation in northern Myanmar, did not show significantly higher RSA values than the WT, they had prolonged ring-stage development and showed very little fitness cost in in vitro culture competition assays. In comparison, parasites with the N458Y mutations also had a prolonged ring stage and showed upregulated resistance pathways in response to artemisinin, but this mutation produced a significant fitness cost, potentially leading to their lower prevalence in the Greater Mekong subregion. IMPORTANCE Artemisinin resistance has emerged in Southeast Asia, endangering the substantial progress in malaria elimination worldwide. It is associated with mutations in the PfK13 protein, but how PfK13 mediates artemisinin resistance is not completely understood. Here we used a new antibody against PfK13 to show that the PfK13 protein is expressed in all stages of the asexual intraerythrocytic cycle as well as in gametocytes and is partially localized in the endoplasmic reticulum. By introducing four PfK13 mutations into the 3D7 strain and reverting these mutations in field parasite isolates, we determined the impacts of these mutations identified in the parasite populations from northern Myanmar on the ring stage using the in vitro ring survival assay. The introduction of the N458Y mutation into the 3D7 background significantly increased the survival rates of the ring-stage parasites but at the cost of the reduced fitness of the parasites. Introduction of the F446I mutation, the most prevalent PfK13 mutation in northern Myanmar, did not result in a significant increase in ring-stage survival after exposure to dihydroartemisinin (DHA), but these parasites showed extended ring-stage development. Further, parasites with the F446I mutation showed only a marginal loss of fitness, partially explaining its high frequency in northern Myanmar. Conversely, reverting all these mutations, except for the C469Y mutation, back to their respective wild types reduced the ring-stage survival of these isolates in response to in vitro DHA treatment.
IFN-γ is a major regulator of immune functions and has been shown to induce liver-stage Plasmodium elimination both in vitro and in vivo. The molecular mechanism responsible for the restriction of liver-stage Plasmodium downstream of IFN-γ remains uncertain, however. Autophagy, a newly described immune defense mechanism, was recently identified as a downstream pathway activated in response to IFN-γ in the control of intracellular infections. We thus hypothesized that the killing of liver-stage malarial parasites by IFN-γ involves autophagy induction. Our results show that whereas IFN-γ treatment of human hepatocytes activates autophagy, the IFN-γ-mediated restriction of liver-stage Plasmodium vivax depends only on the downstream autophagy-related proteins Beclin 1, PI3K, and ATG5, but not on the upstream autophagy-initiating protein ULK1. In addition, IFN-γ enhanced the recruitment of LC3 onto the parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM) and increased the colocalization of lysosomal vesicles with P. vivax compartments. Taken together, these data indicate that IFN-γ mediates the control of liver-stage P. vivax by inducing a noncanonical autophagy pathway resembling that of LC3-associated phagocytosis, in which direct decoration of the PVM with LC3 promotes the fusion of P. vivax compartments with lysosomes and subsequent killing of the pathogen. Understanding the hepatocyte response to IFN-γ during Plasmodium infection and the roles of autophagy-related proteins may provide an urgently needed alternative strategy for the elimination of this human malaria.autophagy | LC3-associated phagocytosis | IFN-γ | malaria S everal hundred million cases of human malaria are reported annually, and nearly 600,000 people die from the disease each year (1). Of the five species that infect humans, Plasmodium vivax is not only the most geographically widespread, but also the most prevalent malarial parasite in areas outside Africa. As such, it has caused massive morbidity in these regions of the world. Although malaria caused by P. vivax was previously regarded as benign compared with that caused by Plasmodium falciparum, the recent alarming increase in both the severity and the drug resistance of P. vivax infection has raised concern (2).The widespread distribution of P. vivax has been attributed to the parasite's ability to remain dormant in the liver for years before reactivation (3). The molecular mechanism responsible for P. vivax dormancy is unknown, and knowledge of Plasmodiumhepatocyte interactions remains very limited. Nonetheless, because the number of liver-stage parasites is in the range of 100, whereas in the blood stage as many as 10 13 organisms may be found (4), intervention at the liver stage would seem to offer a better strategy for parasite elimination. A prerequisite to this route of malaria control and the development of novel therapies is a better understanding of liver-stage Plasmodium and its interactions with host hepatocytes. IFN-γ was previously shown to exhibit antimalarial activity against the liver stag...
Although artemisinin combination therapies have succeeded in reducing the global burden of malaria, multidrug resistance of the deadliest malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, is emerging worldwide. Innovative antimalarial drugs that kill all life-cycle stages of malaria parasites are urgently needed. Here, we report the discovery of the compound JX21108 with broad antiplasmodial activity against multiple life-cycle stages of malaria parasites. JX21108 was developed from chemical optimization of quisinostat, a histone deacetylase inhibitor. We identified P. falciparum histone deacetylase 1 (PfHDAC1), an epigenetic regulator essential for parasite growth and invasion, as a molecular target of JX21108. PfHDAC1 knockdown leads to the downregulation of essential parasite genes, which is highly consistent with the transcriptomic changes induced by JX21108 treatment. Collectively, our data support that PfHDAC1 is a potential drug target for overcoming multidrug resistance and that JX21108 treats malaria and blocks parasite transmission simultaneously.
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