Manipulation of Host Hepatocytes by the Malaria Parasite for Delivery into Liver Sinusoids

The merozoite stage of the malaria parasite that infects erythrocytes and causes the symptoms of the disease is initially formed inside host hepatocytes. However, the mechanism by which hepatic merozoites reach blood vessels (sinusoids) in the liver and escape the host immune system before invading erythrocytes remains unknown. Here, we show that parasites induce the death and the detachment of their host hepatocytes, followed by the budding of parasite-filled vesicles (merosomes) into the sinusoid lumen. Parasites simultaneously inhibit the exposure of phosphatidylserine on the outer leaflet of host plasma membranes, which act as “eat me” signals to phagocytes. Thus, the hepatocyte-derived merosomes appear to ensure both the migration of parasites into the bloodstream and their protection from host immunity.

[1]  J. Vanderberg,et al.  Exoerythrocytic merozoites of Plasmodium berghei in rat hepatic Kupffer cells. , 1979, The Journal of protozoology.

[2]  P. Williamson,et al.  Mechanisms of phosphatidylserine exposure, a phagocyte recognition signal, on apoptotic T lymphocytes , 1995, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[3]  R. Ménard,et al.  Fluorescent Plasmodium berghei sporozoites and pre‐erythrocytic stages: a new tool to study mosquito and mammalian host interactions with malaria parasites , 2001, Cellular Microbiology.

[4]  V. Fadok,et al.  Loss of Phospholipid Asymmetry and Surface Exposure of Phosphatidylserine Is Required for Phagocytosis of Apoptotic Cells by Macrophages and Fibroblasts* , 2001, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.

[5]  P. Rakic,et al.  Phosphatidylserine Receptor Is Required for Clearance of Apoptotic Cells , 2003, Science.

[6]  D. Spiller,et al.  The Digestive Food Vacuole of the Malaria Parasite Is a Dynamic Intracellular Ca2+ Store* , 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry.

[7]  Chris J Janse,et al.  A Plasmodium berghei reference line that constitutively expresses GFP at a high level throughout the complete life cycle. , 2004, Molecular and biochemical parasitology.

[8]  M. Wasserman,et al.  Role of calcium and erythrocyte cytoskeleton phosphorylation in the invasion ofPlasmodium falciparum , 2004, Parasitology Research.

[9]  C. Libert,et al.  The liver stage of Plasmodium berghei inhibits host cell apoptosis , 2005, Molecular microbiology.

[10]  H. Yee,et al.  Intravital Observation of Plasmodium berghei Sporozoite Infection of the Liver , 2005, PLoS biology.

[11]  Ana Rodriguez,et al.  HGF/MET signalling protects Plasmodium‐infected host cells from apoptosis , 2005, Cellular microbiology.

[12]  S. Shorte,et al.  Quantitative imaging of Plasmodium transmission from mosquito to mammal , 2006, Nature Medicine.