Abstract

Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1), encoded by the var gene family, plays a crucial role in disease virulence through its involvement in binding to various host cellular receptors during infection. Growing evidence suggests that differential expression of the various var subgroups may be involved in parasite virulence. To further explore this issue, we have collected isolates from symptomatic patients in south China-Myanmar border, and characterized their sequence diversity and transcription profiles over time of var gene family, and cytoadherence properties from the time of their initial collection and extending through a two month period of adaptation to culture. Initially, we established a highly diverse, DBLα (4 cysteines) subtype-enriched, but unique local repertoire of var-DBL1α sequences by cDNA cloning and sequencing. Next we observed a rapid transcriptional decline of upsA- and upsB-subtype var genes at ring stage through qRT-PCR assays, and a switching event from initial ICAM-I binding to the CD36-binding activity during the first week of adaptive cultivation in vitro. Moreover, predominant transcription of upsA var genes was observed to be correlated with those isolates that showed a higher parasitemia at the time of collection and the ICAM-1-binding phenotype in culture. Taken together, these data indicate that the initial stage of adaptive process in vitro significantly influences the transcription of virulence-related var subtypes and expression of PfEMP1 variants. Further, the specific upregulation of the upsA var genes is likely linked to the rapid propagation of the parasite during natural infection due to the A-type PfEMP1 variant-mediated growth advantages.

Highlights

  • Plasmodium falciparum is the most virulent species of malaria that infects humans

  • The worldwide high diversity of var primary sequences through frequent recombination among field strains, and the switching expression of var genes in different generations contribute to the complexity of the malaria pathogen [19,22,24,39,40,41]

  • To explore the sequence polymorphism and its association with different malaria symptoms, the var gene sequences have been extensively investigated in terms of conserved features of functional regions as DBL1a domain in highly epidemic area in Africa or South America [19,20,28]

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Summary

Introduction

Plasmodium falciparum is the most virulent species of malaria that infects humans. Erythrocytes infected with this parasite adhere to different types of endothelial cells in the deep vasculature of the body to avoid being cleared by the spleen [1,2]. The specificity of adherence is mediated by a polymorphic protein, P. falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1), encoded by members of a multi-gene family (the var genes) [3,4]. It is generally thought that only one member of this family is selectively expressed each generation and migrates to the surface of the infected RBC dictating the cellular receptor to which the erythrocyte will bind [5,6]. All interact with various host cellular receptors such as CD36, ICAM-1, CSA, E-Selectin, VCAM, etc. [1,11,12]

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