Tanabe K
Laboratory of Biology, Osaka Institute of Technology, Japan.
Blood Cells. 1990;16(2-3):437-49.
Malaria parasites of the genus Plasmodium spend much of their asexual life cycle inside the erythrocytes of their vertebrate hosts. Parasites presumably have to exploit metabolic and transport mechanisms to adapt themselves to the host erythrocyte's physicochemical environment. This review surveys the metabolism and transport of Ca2+, alkali cations, and H+ in malaria-infected erythrocytes. The Ca2+ content of Plasmodium-infected erythrocytes increases as the parasite matures. An increase in the influx of extracellular Ca2+ into infected erythrocytes is evident at later stages of parasite development. In infected erythrocytes, Ca2+ is almost exclusively localized in the parasite compartment and changes but little in the cytosol of the host cell. The importance of Ca2+ in supporting the growth of intraerythrocytic parasites and the invasion of erythrocytes by the merozoite has been assessed by depletion of extracellular Ca2+ with chelators, or by disturbance of the metabolism and transport of Ca2+ with a variety of Ca2+ modulators. Membranes of malaria-infected erythrocytes change their permeability to alkali cations. Hence, levels of K+ decrease and levels of Na+ increase in the cytosol of infected erythrocytes. Intraerythrocytic parasites maintain a high K+, low Na+ state, suggesting a mechanism for transporting K+ inward and Na+ outward against concentration gradients of the alkali cations across the parasite plasma membrane and/or the parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM). Concomitantly, P. falciparum can grow in Na(+)-enriched human erythrocytes. Experimental evidence suggests that Plasmodium possesses in its plasma membrane a proton pump which is very sensitive to orthovanadate, carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, a protonophore, and dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, an inhibitor of H(+)-ATPase, but is only slightly sensitive to inhibitors of bacterial and mitochondrial respiration, such as antimycin A, CN-, or N3-, and ouabain, a Na+, K(+)-ATPase inhibitor. By operating this proton pump, parasites extrude H+ and thus generate an electrochemical gradient of protons (an internal negative membrane potential and a concentration gradient of protons) across the parasite plasma membrane. The electrochemical gradient apparently drives inward movement of Ca2+ and, possibly, glucose from the cytosol of infected erythrocytes. Little is known about the transport properties of the PVM. Recent sequence studies suggest that Plasmodium contains a cation-transporting ATPase which exhibits a high homology to the Ca2(+)-ATPase of rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
疟原虫属的疟原虫在其脊椎动物宿主的红细胞内度过其无性生命周期的大部分时间。寄生虫可能必须利用代谢和转运机制来使自身适应宿主红细胞的物理化学环境。本综述概述了疟原虫感染红细胞中Ca2+、碱金属阳离子和H+的代谢与转运。随着疟原虫成熟,感染疟原虫的红细胞中的Ca2+含量会增加。在寄生虫发育的后期,细胞外Ca2+流入感染红细胞的量明显增加。在感染的红细胞中,Ca2+几乎完全定位于寄生虫区室,而在宿主细胞的胞质溶胶中变化很小。通过用螯合剂耗尽细胞外Ca2+,或用多种Ca2+调节剂干扰Ca2+的代谢和转运,已评估了Ca2+在支持红细胞内寄生虫生长和裂殖子入侵红细胞方面的重要性。感染疟原虫的红细胞膜对碱金属阳离子的通透性发生改变。因此,感染红细胞胞质溶胶中的K+水平降低,Na+水平升高。红细胞内的寄生虫维持高K+、低Na+状态,这表明存在一种机制可使K+向内转运、Na+向外转运,以对抗碱金属阳离子在寄生虫质膜和/或寄生泡膜(PVM)上的浓度梯度。同时,恶性疟原虫能够在富含Na+的人红细胞中生长。实验证据表明,疟原虫在其质膜中具有一种质子泵,该质子泵对原钒酸盐、羰基氰化物间氯苯腙(一种质子载体)和二环己基碳二亚胺(一种H(+)-ATP酶抑制剂)非常敏感,但对细菌和线粒体呼吸抑制剂(如抗霉素A、CN-或N3-)以及哇巴因(一种Na+、K(+)-ATP酶抑制剂)仅略有敏感。通过操作这种质子泵,寄生虫排出H+,从而在寄生虫质膜上产生质子的电化学梯度(膜内负电位和质子浓度梯度)。这种电化学梯度显然驱动Ca2+以及可能还有葡萄糖从感染红细胞的胞质溶胶向内移动。关于PVM的转运特性知之甚少。最近的序列研究表明,疟原虫含有一种阳离子转运ATP酶,它与兔骨骼肌肌浆网的Ca2(+)-ATP酶具有高度同源性。(摘要截短于250字)