Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Bio21 Molecular Science and Biotechnology Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Cell Microbiol. 2019 May;21(5):e13005. doi: 10.1111/cmi.13005. Epub 2019 Feb 11.
The simian parasite Plasmodium knowlesi causes severe and fatal malaria infections in humans, but the process of host cell remodelling that underpins the pathology of this zoonotic parasite is only poorly understood. We have used serial block-face scanning electron microscopy to explore the topography of P. knowlesi-infected red blood cells (RBCs) at different stages of asexual development. The parasite elaborates large flattened cisternae (Sinton Mulligan's clefts) and tubular vesicles in the host cell cytoplasm, as well as parasitophorous vacuole membrane bulges and blebs, and caveolar structures at the RBC membrane. Large invaginations of host RBC cytoplasm are formed early in development, both from classical cytostomal structures and from larger stabilised pores. Although degradation of haemoglobin is observed in multiple disconnected digestive vacuoles, the persistence of large invaginations during development suggests inefficient consumption of the host cell cytoplasm. The parasite eventually occupies ~40% of the host RBC volume, inducing a 20% increase in volume of the host RBC and an 11% decrease in the surface area to volume ratio, which collectively decreases the ability of the P. knowlesi-infected RBCs to enter small capillaries of a human erythrocyte microchannel analyser. Ektacytometry reveals a markedly decreased deformability, whereas correlative light microscopy/scanning electron microscopy and python-based skeleton analysis (Skan) reveal modifications to the surface of infected RBCs that underpin these physical changes. We show that P. knowlesi-infected RBCs are refractory to treatment with sorbitol lysis but are hypersensitive to hypotonic lysis. The observed physical changes in the host RBCs may underpin the pathology observed in patients infected with P. knowlesi.
疟原虫属寄生虫食蟹猴疟原虫可导致人类严重且致命的疟疾感染,但这种人畜共患寄生虫的宿主细胞重塑过程仍知之甚少。我们使用连续块面扫描电子显微镜来探索不同无性繁殖阶段感染食蟹猴疟原虫的红细胞(RBC)的细胞表面形貌。寄生虫在宿主细胞质中精心设计了大的扁平蓄水池(Sinton Mulligan 裂陷)和管状囊泡,以及寄生泡膜膨出和泡状突起,以及 RBC 膜的小窝结构。在早期发育过程中,宿主 RBC 细胞质形成了大的内陷,既有来自经典胞饮结构的,也有来自较大的稳定孔的。尽管在多个不连续的消化泡中观察到血红蛋白降解,但在发育过程中大量内陷的存在表明宿主细胞质的消耗效率低下。寄生虫最终占据了宿主 RBC 体积的约 40%,导致宿主 RBC 体积增加 20%,表面积与体积比降低 11%,这共同降低了感染食蟹猴疟原虫的 RBC 进入人红细胞微通道分析仪小毛细血管的能力。微电泳术显示变形能力显著降低,而共聚焦荧光显微镜/扫描电子显微镜和基于 Python 的骨架分析(Skan)显示感染 RBC 表面的修饰,这些修饰是这些物理变化的基础。我们表明,感染食蟹猴疟原虫的 RBC 对山梨醇裂解具有抗性,但对低渗裂解高度敏感。宿主 RBC 中观察到的物理变化可能是感染食蟹猴疟原虫患者中观察到的病理学基础。