Abstract

BackgroundCalcium (Ca2+) signalling is fundamental for host cell invasion, motility, in vivo synchronicity and sexual differentiation of the malaria parasite. Consequently, cytoplasmic free Ca2+ is tightly regulated through the co-ordinated action of primary and secondary Ca2+ transporters. Identifying selective inhibitors of Ca2+ transporters is key towards understanding their physiological role as well as having therapeutic potential, therefore screening systems to facilitate the search for potential inhibitors are a priority. Here, the methodology for the expression of a Calcium membrane transporter that can be scaled to high throughputs in yeast is presented.MethodsThe Plasmodium falciparum Ca2+/H+ antiporter (PfCHA) was expressed in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its activity monitored by the bioluminescence from apoaequorin triggered by divalent cations, such as calcium, magnesium and manganese.ResultsBioluminescence assays demonstrated that PfCHA effectively suppressed induced cytoplasmic peaks of Ca2+, Mg2+ and Mn2+ in yeast mutants lacking the homologue yeast antiporter Vcx1p. In the scalable format of 96-well culture plates pharmacological assays with a cation antiporter inhibitor allowed the measurement of inhibition of the Ca2+ transport activity of PfCHA conveniently translated to the familiar concept of fractional inhibitory concentrations. Furthermore, the cytolocalization of this antiporter in the yeast cells showed that whilst PfCHA seems to locate to the mitochondrion of P. falciparum, in yeast PfCHA is sorted to the vacuole. This facilitates the real-time Ca2+-loading assays for further functional and pharmacological studies.DiscussionThe functional expression of PfCHA in S. cerevisiae and luminescence-based detection of cytoplasmic cations as presented here offer a tractable system that facilitates functional and pharmacological studies in a high-throughput format. PfCHA is shown to behave as a divalent cation/H+ antiporter susceptible to the effects of cation/H+ inhibitors such as KB-R7943. This type of gene expression systems should advance the efforts for the screening of potential inhibitors of this type of divalent cation transporters as part of the malaria drug discovery initiatives and for functional studies in general.ConclusionThe expression and activity of the PfCHA detected in yeast by a bioluminescence assay that follows the levels of cytoplasmic Ca2+ as well as Mg2+ and Mn2+ lend itself to high-throughput and quantitative settings for pharmacological screening and functional studies.

Highlights

  • Calcium (Ca2+) signalling is fundamental for host cell invasion, motility, in vivo synchronicity and sexual differentiation of the malaria parasite

  • Plasmodium falciparum Ca2+/H+ antiporter (PfCHA) restores mobilization of cytoplasmic Ca2+ in Saccharomyces cerevisiae vcx1Δ Yeast vcx1Δ has a significant defect in the rapid Ca2+ sequestration response to high cytosolic levels of this cation [34]

  • Truncated gene transcription is a known phenomenon in yeast expressing AT-rich P. falciparum genes [37] and this is evident in the differential amplifications for fragments in comparison to fulllength Saccharomyces cerevisiae (VCX1) and PfCHA genes (Additional file 1B)

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Summary

Introduction

Calcium (Ca2+) signalling is fundamental for host cell invasion, motility, in vivo synchronicity and sexual differentiation of the malaria parasite. They include erythrocyte invasion [1,2,3], in vivo synchronicity in the erythrocytic cycle [4], together with sexual differentiation, motility and invasion by ookinetes and sporozoites in the mosquito vector [5,6,7]. As in any eukaryote the parasite’s concentration of cytosolic free Ca2+ is tightly maintained at 50-150 nM [8,9]. In eukaryotes this is achieved by its active sequestration into various organelles and/or extrusion to extracellular space.

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