Abstract

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is thought to play an essential role during egress of malaria parasites because the ER is assumed to be required for biogenesis and secretion of egress-related organelles. However, no proteins localized to the parasite ER have been shown to play a role in egress of malaria parasites. In this study, we generated conditional mutants of the Plasmodium falciparumendoplasmic reticulum-resident calcium-binding protein (PfERC), a member of the CREC family. Knockdown of the PfERC gene showed that this gene is essential for asexual growth of P. falciparum Analysis of the intraerythrocytic life cycle revealed that PfERC is essential for parasite egress but is not required for protein trafficking or calcium storage. We found that PfERC knockdown prevents the rupture of the parasitophorous vacuole membrane. This is because PfERC knockdown inhibited the proteolytic maturation of the subtilisin-like serine protease SUB1. Using double mutant parasites, we showed that PfERC is required for the proteolytic maturation of the essential aspartic protease plasmepsin X, which is required for SUB1 cleavage. Further, we showed that processing of substrates downstream of the proteolytic cascade is inhibited by PfERC knockdown. Thus, these data establish that the ER-resident CREC family protein PfERC is a key early regulator of the egress proteolytic cascade of malaria parasites.IMPORTANCE The divergent eukaryotic parasites that cause malaria grow and divide within a vacuole inside a host cell, which they have to break open once they finish cell division. The egress of daughter parasites requires the activation of a proteolytic cascade, and a subtilisin-like protease initiates a proteolytic cascade to break down the membranes blocking egress. It is assumed that the parasite endoplasmic reticulum plays a role in this process, but the proteins in this organelle required for egress remain unknown. We have identified an early ER-resident regulator essential for the maturation of the recently discovered aspartic protease in the egress proteolytic cascade, plasmepsin X, which is required for maturation of the subtilisin-like protease. Conditional loss of PfERC results in the formation of immature and inactive egress proteases that are unable to breakdown the vacuolar membrane barring release of daughter parasites.

Highlights

  • The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is thought to play an essential role during egress of malaria parasites because the ER is assumed to be required for biogenesis and secretion of egress-related organelles

  • PfERC is a CREC family protein localized in the ER

  • PfERC is a protein related to the CREC family of proteins, which are characterized by the presence of multiple EF hands and localization in various parts of the secretory pathway [23, 24] (Fig. 1A; see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material)

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Summary

Introduction

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is thought to play an essential role during egress of malaria parasites because the ER is assumed to be required for biogenesis and secretion of egress-related organelles. We found that PfERC knockdown prevents the rupture of the parasitophorous vacuole membrane This is because PfERC knockdown inhibited the proteolytic maturation of the subtilisin-like serine protease SUB1. We showed that processing of substrates downstream of the proteolytic cascade is inhibited by PfERC knockdown These data establish that the ER-resident CREC family protein PfERC is a key early regulator of the egress proteolytic cascade of malaria parasites. The parasites grow and divide into daughter cells, which must egress from the host cell to complete the asexual life cycle This event depends on the generation of specific organelles that are populated by proteases as well as invasion ligands. The exocytosis of mature PMX and SUB1 from exonemes into the PV commits the parasites to egress resulting in the rapid (ϳ10-min) breakdown of the parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM) and the RBC membrane (RBCM) [14, 15]

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