Abstract

Rosetting, the adhesion of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes to uninfected erythrocytes, involves clonal variants of the parasite protein P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1) and soluble serum factors. While rosetting is a well-known phenotypic marker of parasites associated with severe malaria, the reason for this association remains unclear, as do the molecular details of the interaction between the infected erythrocyte (IE) and the adhering erythrocytes. Here, we identify for the first time a single serum factor, the abundant serum protease inhibitor α2-macroglobulin (α2M), which is both required and sufficient for rosetting mediated by the PfEMP1 protein HB3VAR06 and some other rosette-mediating PfEMP1 proteins. We map the α2M binding site to the C terminal end of HB3VAR06, and demonstrate that α2M can bind at least four HB3VAR06 proteins, plausibly augmenting their combined avidity for host receptors. IgM has previously been identified as a rosette-facilitating soluble factor that acts in a similar way, but it cannot induce rosetting on its own. This is in contrast to α2M and probably due to the more limited cross-linking potential of IgM. Nevertheless, we show that IgM works synergistically with α2M and markedly lowers the concentration of α2M required for rosetting. Finally, HB3VAR06+ IEs share the capacity to bind α2M with subsets of genotypically distinct P. falciparum isolates forming rosettes in vitro and of patient parasite isolates ex vivo. Together, our results are evidence that P. falciparum parasites exploit α2M (and IgM) to expand the repertoire of host receptors available for PfEMP1-mediated IE adhesion, such as the erythrocyte carbohydrate moieties that lead to formation of rosettes. It is likely that this mechanism also affects IE adhesion to receptors on vascular endothelium. The study opens opportunities for broad-ranging immunological interventions targeting the α2M—(and IgM-) binding domains of PfEMP1, which would be independent of the host receptor specificity of clinically important PfEMP1 antigens.

Highlights

  • About 630,000 (0.3%) of the approximately 200 million malaria cases each year are fatal [1]

  • Erythrocytes infected by parasites causing severe P. falciparum malaria often form rosettes by binding a number of uninfected erythrocytes

  • Formation of rosettes often depends on non-immune IgM binding to the infected erythrocytes, that does not by itself lead to formation of rosettes

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Summary

Introduction

About 630,000 (0.3%) of the approximately 200 million malaria cases each year are fatal [1]. The PfEMP1 proteins are expressed on knob-like protrusions on the infected erythrocyte (IE) surface, where they mediate adhesion of IEs to a range of host endothelial receptors [3,4,5,6]. PfEMP1 interaction with the rosetting receptors on surrounding erythrocytes is mediated by N-terminal DBL1 α1.5/6/7/8 domains [19,20,21], whereas rosette-facilitating IgM binds to the membrane-proximal, C-terminal end of PfEMP1 [17,18]. Based on studies of the IgMbinding and rosette-mediating PfEMP1 protein HB3VAR06, we recently proposed that the function of IgM in rosetting could be cross-linking of PfEMP1 molecules [17], thereby overcoming their low individual affinity for their erythrocyte receptors, which are suspected to be mainly sulfated carbohydrate moieties [12,22,23,24]. We found that IgM alone was not sufficient to facilitate HB3VAR06-mediated rosetting, in line with earlier findings [15,16], and we set out to identify the missing serum component(s) involved in rosetting and describe their involvement in the interaction

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