How Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites bind to human brain endothelial cells
dc.contributor.advisor
Rowe, Alex
en
dc.contributor.author
Claessens, Antoine
en
dc.contributor.sponsor
Wellcome Trust
en
dc.date.accessioned
2011-05-24T14:02:36Z
dc.date.available
2011-05-24T14:02:36Z
dc.date.issued
2011
dc.description.abstract
Cerebral malaria is characterised by an accumulation of infected erythrocytes in the microvasculature of the brain. Plasmodium falciparum infected erythrocytes have been shown to bind to a Human Brain Endothelial Cell line (HBEC-5i) in vitro. This provides a model for the investigation of interactions between P. falcuparum and human brain endothelium. Currently neither the parasite adhesion ligands on infected erythrocytes, nor the host endothelial cell receptors necessary for this interaction have been identified. In this work, the identity of the host receptor on brain endothelial cells was addressed by binding assays of selected and unselected parasites on a wide range of malaria-associated host molecules. The identity of the parasite ligand was investigated by microarray analysis of parasites after selection for cytoadherence to HBEC-5i. The hypothesis being tested was that the gene encoding the parasite cytoadherence ligand would show significant upregulation in selected compared to unselected paarasites. The P. falciparum laboratory strains 3D7, HB3 and IT/FCR3 were selected for binding to HBEC-5i using a panning assay. Compared to unselected parasites, HBEC-5i selected parasites showed a distinct phenotype with reduced platelet-mediated clumping. There was no significant increase in binding of parasites to any of the known endothelial cytoadherence receptors for P. falciparum after selection on HBEC-5i. Binding inhibition assays with various antibodies and soluble receptors did not greatly block the adhesion of parasites to HBEC-5i except for heparin. Altogether, the receptor(s) mediating the interation with HBEC-5i remains unknown. In order to carry out transcriptional analysis of selected and unselected paarasites form all three parasite strains, it was necessary to update the existing microarray chip which is based on the 3D7 genome. This is because each parasite train has a unique repertoire of variant surface antigens (VSAs) including var, rif and stevor genes. Therefore, to fully analysis HB3 and IT genomes. Unique oligonnucleotide probes were then designed for each new sequence and the 3D7-based microarray chip was updated. Transcriptional analysis was then carried out on selected and unselected parasites of all strains. Microarray data clearly indicated that the most highly upregulated genes after selection were group A or group A-like var genes (HB3var3, 3D7_PFDOO2Oc, ITvar7 and ITvar19), showing 11 to over 100 fold upregulation in selected parasites. The rif gene adjacent to the upregulated var gene was also highly expressed. To a lesser extent some exported proteins like RESA-1, PfEMP3 or PHIST family members also showed increased transcription in HBEC-selected parasites (2-3 fold upregulation). Reverse transcriptase-PCR confirmed the upregulation of group A var genes in selected parasites, suggessted that the group A PfEMP1 variants are major candidate ligands for parasite binding to HBEC-5i. These findings are consistent with previous work showing an association between Group A var genes and cerebral malaria.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/4897
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Rowe, J.A., Claessens, A., Corrigan, R.A., and Arman, M., 2009a. Adhesion of plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes to human cells: molecular mechanisms and therapeutic implications. Expeert reviews in molecular medicine 11, e16.
en
dc.subject
cerebral malaria
en
dc.subject
erythrocytes
en
dc.subject
human brain endothelium
en
dc.subject
HBEC-5i
en
dc.subject
parasite ligand
en
dc.subject
var gene
en
dc.subject
rif gene
en
dc.subject
plasmodium falciparum malaria
en
dc.title
How Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites bind to human brain endothelial cells
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

