Cell-Passage Activity Is Required for the Malarial Parasite to Cross the Liver Sinusoidal Cell Layer

Liver infection is an obligatory step in malarial transmission, but it remains unclear how the sporozoites gain access to the hepatocytes, which are separated from the circulatory system by the liver sinusoidal cell layer. We found that a novel microneme protein, named sporozoite microneme protein essential for cell traversal (SPECT), is produced by the liver-infective sporozoite of the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium berghei. Targeted disruption of the spect gene greatly reduced sporozoite infectivity to the liver. In vitro cell invasion assays revealed that these disruptants can infect hepatocytes normally but completely lack their cell passage ability. Their apparent liver infectivity was, however, restored by depletion of Kupffer cells, hepatic macrophages included in the sinusoidal cell layer. These results show that malarial sporozoites access hepatocytes through the liver sinusoidal cell layer by cell traversal motility mediated by SPECT and strongly suggest that Kupffer cells are main routes for this passage. Our findings may open the way for novel malaria transmission-blocking strategies that target molecules involved in sporozoite migration to the hepatocyte.

[1]  N. Van Rooijen,et al.  Liposome mediated depletion of macrophages: mechanism of action, preparation of liposomes and applications. , 1994, Journal of immunological methods.

[2]  Ana Rodriguez,et al.  Invasion of mammalian host cells by Plasmodium sporozoites , 2002, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.

[3]  M. J. Stewart,et al.  Plasmodium sporozoite-host cell interactions during sporozoite invasion. , 1990, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[4]  S. Hoffman,et al.  Attacking the infected hepatocyte. , 1996 .

[5]  H. Sakaida,et al.  Targeted Disruption of the Plasmodium berghei Ctrp Gene Reveals Its Essential Role in Malaria Infection of the Vector Mosquito , 1999, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[6]  U. Frevert,et al.  Proteoglycans mediate malaria sporozoite targeting to the liver , 2002, Molecular microbiology.

[7]  P. Sinnis The malaria sporozoite's journey into the liver. , 1996, Infectious agents and disease.

[8]  M. Mota,et al.  Migration through host cells activates Plasmodium sporozoites for infection , 2003, Nature Medicine.

[9]  Jonathan E. Allen,et al.  Genome sequence of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum , 2002, Nature.

[10]  V. Nussenzweig,et al.  The basolateral domain of the hepatocyte plasma membrane bears receptors for the circumsporozoite protein of plasmodium falciparum sporozoites , 1992, Cell.

[11]  J. Vanderberg,et al.  Protective Immunity produced by the Injection of X-irradiated Sporozoites of Plasmodium berghei , 1967, Nature.

[12]  J. Meis,et al.  An ultrastructural study on the role of Kupffer cells in the process of infection by Plasmodium berghei sporozoites in rats , 1983, Parasitology.

[13]  Y. Chinzei,et al.  MAEBL Is Essential for Malarial Sporozoite Infection of the Mosquito Salivary Gland , 2002, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[14]  S. Kappe,et al.  The Plasmodium sporozoite journey: a rite of passage. , 2003, Trends in parasitology.

[15]  J. Verhave,et al.  Kupffer cell elimination enhances development of liver schizonts of Plasmodium berghei in rats , 1993, Infection and immunity.

[16]  U. Frevert,et al.  Malaria sporozoites actively enter and pass through rat Kupffer cells prior to hepatocyte invasion , 2001, Hepatology.

[17]  M. Hollingdale,et al.  In vitro cultivation of the exoerythrocytic stage of Plasmodium berghei from sporozoites. , 1981, Science.

[18]  R. Ménard,et al.  Gliding motility and cell invasion by Apicomplexa: insights from the Plasmodium sporozoite , 2001, Cellular Microbiology.

[19]  Luc Bouwens,et al.  Quantitation, tissue distribution and proliferation kinetics of kupffer cells in normal rat liver , 1986, Hepatology.

[20]  M. Mota,et al.  Migration of Plasmodium sporozoites through cells before infection. , 2001, Science.

[21]  S. Hoffman,et al.  Preventing sporozoite invasion of hepatocytes. , 1996 .

[22]  T. Tsuboi,et al.  von Willebrand Factor A domain-related protein, a novel microneme protein of the malaria ookinete highly conserved throughout Plasmodium parasites. , 2001, Molecular and biochemical parasitology.

[23]  Jonathan E. Allen,et al.  Genome sequence and comparative analysis of the model rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium yoelii yoelii , 2002, Nature.

[24]  Stuart M. Brown,et al.  Infectivity-associated Changes in the Transcriptional Repertoire of the Malaria Parasite Sporozoite Stage* , 2002, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.

[25]  R. Ménard The journey of the malaria sporozoite through its hosts: two parasite proteins lead the way. , 2000, Microbes and infection.

[26]  Andrea Crisanti,et al.  TRAP Is Necessary for Gliding Motility and Infectivity of Plasmodium Sporozoites , 1997, Cell.

[27]  A. Sultan Molecular mechanisms of malaria sporozoite motility and invasion of host cells. , 1999, International microbiology : the official journal of the Spanish Society for Microbiology.