Wang Bo, Lu Feng, Han Jin-Hee, Lee Seong-Kyun, Cheng Yang, Nyunt Myat Htut, Ha Kwon-Soo, Hong Seok-Ho, Park Won Sun, Han Eun-Taek
Department of Medical Environmental Biology and Tropical Medicine, School of Medicine, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon, 24341, Korea.
Department of Clinical Laboratory, The First Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University, Hefei, Anhui 230000, China.
Korean J Parasitol. 2016 Dec;54(6):725-732. doi: 10.3347/kjp.2016.54.6.725. Epub 2016 Dec 31.
produces numerous caveola-vesicle complex (CVC) structures beneath the membrane of infected erythrocytes. Recently, a member helical interspersed subtelomeric (PHIST) superfamily protein, PcyPHIST/CVC-81, was identified as CVCs-associated protein in and essential for survival of this parasite. Very little information has been documented to date about PHIST/CVC-81 protein in . In this study, the recombinant PvPHIST/CVC-81 N and C termini were expressed, and immunoreactivity was assessed using confirmed vivax malaria patients sera by protein microarray. The subcellular localization of PvPHIST/CVC-81 N and C termini in blood stage parasites was also determined. The antigenicity of recombinant PvPHIST/CVC-81 N and C terminal proteins were analyzed by using serum samples from the Republic of Korea. The results showed that immunoreactivities to these proteins had 61% and 43% sensitivity and 96.9% and 93.8% specificity, respectively. The N terminal of PvPHIST/CVC-81 which contains transmembrane domain and export motif (PEXEL; RxLxE/Q/D) produced CVCs location throughout the erythrocytic-stage parasites. However, no fluorescence was detected with antibodies against C terminal fragment of PvPHIST/CVC-81. These results suggest that the PvPHIST/CVC-81 is localized on the CVCs and may be immunogenic in natural infection of .