Magowan C, Wollish W, Anderson L, Leech J
Medical Service, San Francisco General Hospital, California 94110.
J Exp Med. 1988 Oct 1;168(4):1307-20. doi: 10.1084/jem.168.4.1307.
Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes (IRBCs) adhere specifically to venular endothelium and thereby evade spleen-dependent immune mechanisms. We have investigated the molecular basis of cytoadherence. We report here that the capacity for cytoadherence of IRBCs is correlated with the expression of a family of variable proteins on the surface of IRBCs. Essential to these studies was the use of in vitro techniques for modulating the cytoadherence phenotype of cloned parasites. In initial studies, we found culture-adapted parasites to be poorly cytoadherent or noncytoadherent. To select for cytoadherent parasites, we incubated knobbed IRBCs with C32 melanoma cells and cultured the adherent cells. Repeated rounds of selection produced parasites with increased cytoadherence. To select for noncytoadherent parasites, we cultured the cells that did not adhere to C32 melanoma cells. Cytoadherent IRBCs from two different cloned isolates had large (Mr greater than 2.4 x 10(5) radioiodinatable proteins that differed in size between the isolates but had in common the biochemical properties of trypsin sensitivity and insolubility with Triton X-100. The proteins were not detected with uninfected erythrocytes, indicating that they were parasite determined, nor were they detected with IRBCs containing parasites cultured for many months without selection. With continued selection for the cytoadherent phenotype, additional IRBC surface proteins with larger molecular sizes (Mr 2.9 x 10(5) and 3.2 x 10(5] appeared. A sequence of reversible changes in the cytoadherence phenotype of cloned parasites was accompanied by variation in the molecular size of the IRBC surface protein. Increased cytoadherence was correlated with expression of larger proteins and decreased cytoadherence was correlated with expression of smaller proteins; there was no change in the molecular size of two other parasite proteins associated with the IRBC membrane. The results indicate that the expression of this family of proteins is closely linked to the cytoadherence phenotype of the parasites, suggesting that the members of the protein family have a role in mediating cytoadherence between IRBCs and endothelial cells.
恶性疟原虫感染的红细胞(IRBCs)特异性地黏附于小静脉内皮,从而逃避依赖脾脏的免疫机制。我们研究了细胞黏附的分子基础。我们在此报告,IRBCs的细胞黏附能力与IRBCs表面一族可变蛋白的表达相关。这些研究的关键在于使用体外技术来调节克隆寄生虫的细胞黏附表型。在初步研究中,我们发现适应培养的寄生虫细胞黏附性差或无细胞黏附性。为了筛选出具有细胞黏附性的寄生虫,我们将有凸起的IRBCs与C32黑色素瘤细胞一起孵育,并培养黏附的细胞。经过多轮筛选,得到了细胞黏附性增强的寄生虫。为了筛选出无细胞黏附性的寄生虫,我们培养了未黏附于C32黑色素瘤细胞的细胞。来自两种不同克隆分离株的具有细胞黏附性的IRBCs有大的(分子量大于2.4×10⁵)可被放射性碘标记的蛋白,这些蛋白在分离株之间大小不同,但具有对胰蛋白酶敏感和不溶于 Triton X - 100 的生化特性。未感染的红细胞未检测到这些蛋白,表明它们是由寄生虫决定的,在未经筛选培养数月的含有寄生虫的IRBCs中也未检测到。随着对细胞黏附表型的持续筛选,出现了分子大小更大(分子量为2.9×10⁵和3.2×10⁵)的其他IRBC表面蛋白。克隆寄生虫细胞黏附表型的一系列可逆变化伴随着IRBC表面蛋白分子大小的变化。细胞黏附性增强与较大蛋白的表达相关,细胞黏附性降低与较小蛋白的表达相关;与IRBC膜相关的另外两种寄生虫蛋白的分子大小没有变化。结果表明,这一族蛋白的表达与寄生虫的细胞黏附表型密切相关,提示该蛋白家族成员在介导IRBCs与内皮细胞之间的细胞黏附中起作用。