Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
32
result(s) for
"Mair, Gunnar R."
Sort by:
A Putative Small Solute Transporter Is Responsible for the Secretion of G377 and TRAP-Containing Secretory Vesicles during Plasmodium Gamete Egress and Sporozoite Motility
by
Kehrer, Jessica
,
Singer, Mirko
,
Silva, Patricia A. G. C.
in
Animals
,
Anopheles - parasitology
,
Aquatic insects
2016
Regulated protein secretion is required for malaria parasite life cycle progression and transmission between the mammalian host and mosquito vector. During transmission from the host to the vector, exocytosis of highly specialised secretory vesicles, such as osmiophilic bodies, is key to the dissolution of the red blood cell and parasitophorous vacuole membranes enabling gamete egress. The positioning of adhesins from the TRAP family, from micronemes to the sporozoite surface, is essential for gliding motility of the parasite and transmission from mosquito to mammalian host. Here we identify a conserved role for the putative pantothenate transporter PAT in Plasmodium berghei in vesicle fusion of two distinct classes of vesicles in gametocytes and sporozoites. PAT is a membrane component of osmiophilic bodies in gametocytes and micronemes in sporozoites. Despite normal formation and trafficking of osmiophilic bodies to the cell surface upon activation, PAT-deficient gametes fail to discharge their contents, remain intraerythrocytic and unavailable for fertilisation and further development in the mosquito. Sporozoites lacking PAT fail to secrete TRAP, are immotile and thus unable to infect the subsequent rodent host. Thus, P. berghei PAT appears to regulate exocytosis in two distinct populations of vesicles in two different life cycle forms rather than acting as pantothenic transporter during parasite transmission.
Journal Article
Universal Features of Post-Transcriptional Gene Regulation Are Critical for Plasmodium Zygote Development
by
Garver, Lindsey S.
,
Franke-Fayard, Blandine M. D.
,
Lasonder, Edwin
in
Animals
,
Blotting, Southern
,
Blotting, Western
2010
A universal feature of metazoan sexual development is the generation of oocyte P granules that withhold certain mRNA species from translation to provide coding potential for proteins during early post-fertilization development. Stabilisation of translationally quiescent mRNA pools in female Plasmodium gametocytes depends on the RNA helicase DOZI, but the molecular machinery involved in the silencing of transcripts in these protozoans is unknown. Using affinity purification coupled with mass-spectrometric analysis we identify a messenger ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) from Plasmodium berghei gametocytes defined by DOZI and the Sm-like factor CITH (homolog of worm CAR-I and fly Trailer Hitch). This mRNP includes 16 major factors, including proteins with homologies to components of metazoan P granules and archaeal proteins. Containing translationally silent transcripts, this mRNP integrates eIF4E and poly(A)-binding protein but excludes P body RNA degradation factors and translation-initiation promoting eIF4G. Gene deletion mutants of 2 core components of this mRNP (DOZI and CITH) are fertilization-competent, but zygotes fail to develop into ookinetes in a female gametocyte-mutant fashion. Through RNA-immunoprecipitation and global expression profiling of CITH-KO mutants we highlight CITH as a crucial repressor of maternally supplied mRNAs. Our data define Plasmodium P granules as an ancient mRNP whose protein core has remained evolutionarily conserved from single-cell organisms to germ cells of multi-cellular animals and stores translationally silent mRNAs that are critical for early post-fertilization development during the initial stages of mosquito infection. Therefore, translational repression may offer avenues as a target for the generation of transmission blocking strategies and contribute to limiting the spread of malaria.
Journal Article
TurboID Identification of Evolutionarily Divergent Components of the Nuclear Pore Complex in the Malaria Model Plasmodium berghei
by
Mair, Gunnar R.
,
Ambekar, Sushma V.
,
Beck, Josh R.
in
Amino acid sequence
,
BioID
,
Blood parasites
2022
The nuclear pore complex (NPC) is a platform for constant evolution and has been used to study the evolutionary patterns of early-branching eukaryotes. The
Plasmodium
NPC is poorly defined due to its evolutionary divergent nature making it impossible to characterize it via homology searches.
Twenty years since the publication of the
Plasmodium falciparum
and
P. berghei
genomes one-third of their protein-coding genes still lack functional annotation. In the absence of sequence and structural homology, protein-protein interactions can facilitate functional prediction of such orphan genes by mapping protein complexes in their natural cellular environment. The
Plasmodium
nuclear pore complex (NPC) is a case in point: it remains poorly defined; its constituents lack conservation with the 30+ proteins described in the NPC of many opisthokonts, a clade of eukaryotes that includes fungi and animals, but not
Plasmodium
. Here, we developed a labeling methodology based on TurboID fusion proteins, which allows visualization of the
P. berghei
NPC and facilitates the identification of its components. Following affinity purification and mass spectrometry, we identified 4 known nucleoporins (Nups) (138, 205, 221, and the bait 313), and verify interaction with the putative phenylalanine-glycine (FG) Nup637; we assigned 5 proteins lacking annotation (and therefore meaningful homology with proteins outside the genus) to the NPC, which is confirmed by green fluorescent protein (GFP) tagging. Based on gene deletion attempts, all new Nups — Nup176, 269, 335, 390, and 434 — are essential to parasite survival. They lack primary sequence homology with proteins outside the
Plasmodium
genus; albeit 2 incorporate short domains with structural homology to human Nup155 and yeast Nup157, and the condensin SMC (Structural Maintenance Of Chromosomes 4). The protocols developed here showcase the power of proximity labeling for elucidating protein complex composition and annotation of taxonomically restricted genes in
Plasmodium
. It opens the door to exploring the function of the
Plasmodium
NPC and understanding its evolutionary position.
IMPORTANCE
The nuclear pore complex (NPC) is a platform for constant evolution and has been used to study the evolutionary patterns of early-branching eukaryotes. The
Plasmodium
NPC is poorly defined due to its evolutionary divergent nature making it impossible to characterize it via homology searches. Although 2 decades have passed since the publication of the
Plasmodium
genome, 30% of the genes still lack functional annotation. Our study demonstrates the ability of proximity labeling using TurboID to assign function to orphan proteins in the malaria parasite. We have identified a total of 10 Nups that will allow further study of NPC dynamics, structural elements, involvement in nucleocytoplasmic transport, and unique non-transport functions of nucleoporins that provide adaptability to this malaria parasite.
Journal Article
Zinc finger nuclease-based double-strand breaks attenuate malaria parasites and reveal rare microhomology-mediated end joining
by
Singer, Mirko
,
Heiss, Kirsten
,
Grimm, Dirk
in
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Base pairs
,
Binding sites
2015
Background
Genome editing of malaria parasites is key to the generation of live attenuated parasites used in experimental vaccination approaches. DNA repair in
Plasmodium
generally occurs only through homologous recombination. This has been used to generate transgenic parasites that lack one to three genes, leading to developmental arrest in the liver and allowing the host to launch a protective immune response. While effective in principle, this approach is not safe for use in humans as single surviving parasites can still cause disease. Here we use zinc-finger nucleases to generate attenuated parasite lines lacking an entire chromosome arm, by a timed induction of a double-strand break. Rare surviving parasites also allow the investigation of unconventional DNA repair mechanisms in a rodent malaria parasite.
Results
A single, zinc-finger nuclease-induced DNA double-strand break results in the generation of attenuated parasite lines that show varying degrees of developmental arrest, protection efficacy in an immunisation regime and safety, depending on the timing of zinc-finger nuclease expression within the life cycle. We also identify DNA repair by microhomology-mediated end joining with as little as four base pairs, resulting in surviving parasites and thus breakthrough infections.
Conclusions
Malaria parasites can repair DNA double-strand breaks with surprisingly small mini-homology domains located across the break point. Timely expression of zinc-finger nucleases could be used to generate a new generation of attenuated parasite lines lacking hundreds of genes.
Journal Article
The PTEX Pore Component EXP2 Is Important for Intrahepatic Development during the Plasmodium Liver Stage
by
Smith, Ryan C.
,
Linera-Gonzalez, Jose
,
Beck, Josh R.
in
3' Untranslated regions
,
Animals
,
Blood
2022
After the mosquito bite that initiates a
Plasmodium
infection, parasites first travel to the liver and develop in hepatocytes. This liver stage is asymptomatic but necessary for the parasite to transition to the merozoite form, which infects red blood cells and causes malaria.
During vertebrate infection, obligate intracellular malaria parasites develop within a parasitophorous vacuole, which constitutes the interface between the parasite and its hepatocyte or erythrocyte host cells. To traverse this barrier,
Plasmodium
spp. utilize a dual-function pore formed by EXP2 for nutrient transport and, in the context of the PTEX translocon, effector protein export across the vacuole membrane. While critical to blood-stage survival, less is known about EXP2/PTEX function in the liver stage, although major differences in the export mechanism are suggested by absence of the PTEX unfoldase HSP101 in the intrahepatic vacuole. Here, we employed the glucosamine-activated
glmS
ribozyme to study the role of EXP2 during
Plasmodium berghei
liver-stage development in hepatoma cells. Insertion of the
glmS
sequence into the
exp2
3′ untranslated region (UTR) enabled glucosamine-dependent depletion of EXP2 after hepatocyte invasion, allowing separation of EXP2 function during intrahepatic development from a recently reported role in hepatocyte invasion. Postinvasion EXP2 knockdown reduced parasite size and largely abolished expression of the mid- to late-liver-stage marker LISP2. As an orthogonal approach to monitor development, EXP2-
glmS
parasites and controls were engineered to express nanoluciferase. Activation of
glmS
after invasion substantially decreased luminescence in hepatoma monolayers and in culture supernatants at later time points corresponding to merosome detachment, which marks the culmination of liver-stage development. Collectively, our findings extend the utility of the
glmS
ribozyme to study protein function in the liver stage and reveal that EXP2 is important for intrahepatic parasite development, indicating that PTEX components also function at the hepatocyte-parasite interface.
IMPORTANCE
After the mosquito bite that initiates a
Plasmodium
infection, parasites first travel to the liver and develop in hepatocytes. This liver stage is asymptomatic but necessary for the parasite to transition to the merozoite form, which infects red blood cells and causes malaria. To take over their host cells, avoid immune defenses, and fuel their growth, these obligately intracellular parasites must import nutrients and export effector proteins across a vacuole membrane in which they reside. In the blood stage, these processes depend on a translocon called PTEX, but it is unclear if PTEX also functions during the liver stage. Here, we adapted the
glmS
ribozyme to control expression of EXP2, the membrane pore component of PTEX, during the liver stage of the rodent malaria parasite
Plasmodium berghei
. Our results show that EXP2 is important for intracellular development in the hepatocyte, revealing that PTEX components are also functionally important during liver-stage infection.
Journal Article
Proteomic Profiling of Plasmodium Sporozoite Maturation Identifies New Proteins Essential for Parasite Development and Infectivity
by
Kroeze, Hans
,
Khan, Shahid M.
,
Lasonder, Edwin
in
Animals
,
Anopheles - parasitology
,
Causes of
2008
Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites that develop and mature inside an Anopheles mosquito initiate a malaria infection in humans. Here we report the first proteomic comparison of different parasite stages from the mosquito -- early and late oocysts containing midgut sporozoites, and the mature, infectious salivary gland sporozoites. Despite the morphological similarity between midgut and salivary gland sporozoites, their proteomes are markedly different, in agreement with their increase in hepatocyte infectivity. The different sporozoite proteomes contain a large number of stage specific proteins whose annotation suggest an involvement in sporozoite maturation, motility, infection of the human host and associated metabolic adjustments. Analyses of proteins identified in the P. falciparum sporozoite proteomes by orthologous gene disruption in the rodent malaria parasite, P. berghei, revealed three previously uncharacterized Plasmodium proteins that appear to be essential for sporozoite development at distinct points of maturation in the mosquito. This study sheds light on the development and maturation of the malaria parasite in an Anopheles mosquito and also identifies proteins that may be essential for sporozoite infectivity to humans.
Journal Article
EAT-18 is an essential auxiliary protein interacting with the non-alpha nAChR subunit EAT-2 to form a functional receptor
by
Buxton, Samuel K.
,
Robertson, Alan P.
,
McCoy, Ciaran J.
in
Acetylcholine - pharmacology
,
Acetylcholine receptors (nicotinic)
,
Amino acids
2020
Nematode parasites infect approximately 1.5 billion people globally and are a significant public health concern. There is an accepted need for new, more effective anthelmintic drugs. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on parasite nerve and somatic muscle are targets of the cholinomimetic anthelmintics, while glutamate-gated chloride channels in the pharynx of the nematode are affected by the avermectins. Here we describe a novel nicotinic acetylcholine receptor on the nematode pharynx that is a potential new drug target. This homomeric receptor is comprised of five non-α EAT-2 subunits and is not sensitive to existing cholinomimetic anthelmintics. We found that EAT-18, a novel auxiliary subunit protein, is essential for functional expression of the receptor. EAT-18 directly interacts with the mature receptor, and different homologs alter the pharmacological properties. Thus we have described not only a novel potential drug target but also a new type of obligate auxiliary protein for nAChRs.
Journal Article
Nuclear pore complexes undergo Nup221 exchange during blood-stage asexual replication of Plasmodium parasites
by
Absalon, Sabrina
,
Hussain, Tahir
,
Blauwkamp, James
in
Animals
,
Cell Nucleus - metabolism
,
Erythrocytes - parasitology
2024
Malaria, caused by
Plasmodium
species, remains a critical global health challenge, with an estimated 249 million cases and over 600,000 deaths in 2022, primarily affecting children under five. Understanding the nuclear dynamics of
Plasmodium
parasites, particularly during their unique mitotic processes, is crucial for developing novel therapeutic strategies. Our study leverages advanced microscopy techniques, such as ultrastructure expansion microscopy, to reveal the organization and turnover of nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) during the parasite’s asexual replication. By elucidating these previously unknown aspects of NPC distribution and homeostasis, we provide valuable insights into the molecular mechanisms governing parasite mitosis. These findings deepen our understanding of parasite biology and may inform future research aimed at identifying new targets for anti-malarial drug development.
Journal Article
Nuclear Pore Complex Components in the Malaria Parasite Plasmodium berghei
2018
The nuclear pore complex (NPC) is a large macromolecular assembly of around 30 different proteins, so-called nucleoporins (Nups). Embedded in the nuclear envelope the NPC mediates bi-directional exchange between the cytoplasm and the nucleus and plays a role in transcriptional regulation that is poorly understood. NPCs display modular arrangements with an overall structure that is generally conserved among many eukaryotic phyla. However, Nups of yeast or human origin show little primary sequence conservation with those from early-branching protozoans leaving those of the malaria parasite unrecognized. Here we have combined bioinformatic and genetic methods to identify and spatially characterize Nup components in the rodent infecting parasite
Plasmodium berghei
and identified orthologs from the human malaria parasite
P. falciparum
, as well as the related apicomplexan parasite
Toxoplasma gondii
. For the first time we show the localization of selected Nups throughout the
P. berghei
life cycle. Largely restricted to apicomplexans we identify an extended C-terminal poly-proline extension in SEC13 that is essential for parasite survival and provide high-resolution images of
Plasmodium
NPCs obtained by cryo electron tomography. Our data provide the basis for full characterization of NPCs in malaria parasites, early branching unicellular eukaryotes with significant impact on human health.
Journal Article
Malaria transmission through the mosquito requires the function of the OMD protein
by
Kehrer, Jessica
,
Silva, Patricia A. G. C.
,
Frischknecht, Friedrich
in
Analysis
,
Animals
,
Anopheles - parasitology
2019
Ookinetes, one of the motile and invasive forms of the malaria parasite, rely on gliding motility in order to establish an infection in the mosquito host. Here we characterize the protein PBANKA_0407300 which is conserved in the Plasmodium genus but lacks significant similarity to proteins of other eukaryotes. It is expressed in gametocytes and throughout the invasive mosquito stages of P. berghei, but is absent from asexual blood stages. Mutants lacking the protein developed morphologically normal ookinetes that were devoid of productive motility although some stretching movement could be detected. We therefore named the protein Ookinete Motility Deficient (OMD). Several key factors known to be involved in motility however were normally expressed and localized in the mutant. Importantly, the mutant failed to establish an infection in the mosquito which resulted in a total malaria transmission blockade.
Journal Article