Burnet Institute, Melbourne 3004, Australia.
Int J Parasitol. 2010 Apr;40(5):509-13. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2010.02.002. Epub 2010 Feb 17.
It is somewhat paradoxical that the malaria parasite's survival strategy involves spending almost all of its blood-stage existence residing behind a two-membrane barrier in a host red blood cell, yet giving considerable attention to exporting parasite-encoded proteins back across these membranes. These exported proteins are thought to play diverse roles and are crucial in pathogenic processes, such as re-modelling of the erythrocyte cytoskeleton and mediating the export of a major virulence protein known as Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1), and in metabolic processes such as nutrient uptake and solute exchange. Despite these varied roles most exported proteins have at least one common link; they share a trafficking pathway that begins with entry into the endoplasmic reticulum and concludes with passage across the vacuole membrane via a proteinaceous translocon known as the Plasmodium translocon of exported proteins (PTEX). In this commentary we review recent advances in our understanding of this export pathway and suggest several models by which different aspects of the process may be interconnected.
有一种矛盾的说法,疟原虫的生存策略是在宿主的红细胞中,几乎将其所有血期存在都置于双层膜的屏障后面,但却非常重视将寄生虫编码的蛋白质反向输出到这些膜上。这些输出的蛋白质被认为具有多种作用,对于发病过程至关重要,例如红细胞骨架的重新塑造以及介导一种主要的毒力蛋白(即恶性疟原虫红细胞膜蛋白 1,PfEMP1)的输出,以及在代谢过程中,如营养物质的摄取和溶质交换。尽管这些输出蛋白具有多种作用,但它们至少有一个共同的联系;它们共享一个从内质网进入并通过一种称为疟原虫输出蛋白的蛋白转位通道(PTEX)穿过液泡膜的运输途径。在这篇评论中,我们回顾了对该输出途径的理解的最新进展,并提出了几种模型,说明该过程的不同方面可能是相互关联的。