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Co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence

The pathology associated with malaria infection is largely due to the ability of infected human RBCs to adhere to a number of receptors on endothelial cells within tissues and organs. This phenomenon is driven by the export of parasite-encoded proteins to the host cell, the exact function of many of...

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Autores principales: Diehl, Mathias, Roling, Lena, Rohland, Lukas, Weber, Sebastian, Cyrklaff, Marek, Sanchez, Cecilia P., Beretta, Carlo A., Simon, Caroline S., Guizetti, Julien, Hahn, Julia, Schulz, Norma, Mayer, Matthias P., Przyborski, Jude M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8544838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34614006
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009969
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author Diehl, Mathias
Roling, Lena
Rohland, Lukas
Weber, Sebastian
Cyrklaff, Marek
Sanchez, Cecilia P.
Beretta, Carlo A.
Simon, Caroline S.
Guizetti, Julien
Hahn, Julia
Schulz, Norma
Mayer, Matthias P.
Przyborski, Jude M.
author_facet Diehl, Mathias
Roling, Lena
Rohland, Lukas
Weber, Sebastian
Cyrklaff, Marek
Sanchez, Cecilia P.
Beretta, Carlo A.
Simon, Caroline S.
Guizetti, Julien
Hahn, Julia
Schulz, Norma
Mayer, Matthias P.
Przyborski, Jude M.
author_sort Diehl, Mathias
collection PubMed
description The pathology associated with malaria infection is largely due to the ability of infected human RBCs to adhere to a number of receptors on endothelial cells within tissues and organs. This phenomenon is driven by the export of parasite-encoded proteins to the host cell, the exact function of many of which is still unknown. Here we inactivate the function of one of these exported proteins, PFA66, a member of the J-domain protein family. Although parasites lacking this protein were still able to grow in cell culture, we observed severe defects in normal host cell modification, including aberrant morphology of surface knobs, disrupted presentation of the cytoadherence molecule PfEMP1, and a total lack of cytoadherence, despite the presence of the knob associated protein KAHRP. Complementation assays demonstrate that an intact J-domain is required for recovery to a wild-type phenotype and suggest that PFA66 functions in concert with a HSP70 to carry out host cell modification. Strikingly, this HSP70 is likely to be of host origin. ATPase assays on recombinant protein verify a functional interaction between PFA66 and residual host cell HSP70. Taken together, our data reveal a role for PFA66 in host cell modification, strongly implicate human HSP70s as being essential in this process and uncover a new KAHRP-independent molecular factor required for correct knob biogenesis.
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spelling pubmed-85448382021-10-26 Co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence Diehl, Mathias Roling, Lena Rohland, Lukas Weber, Sebastian Cyrklaff, Marek Sanchez, Cecilia P. Beretta, Carlo A. Simon, Caroline S. Guizetti, Julien Hahn, Julia Schulz, Norma Mayer, Matthias P. Przyborski, Jude M. PLoS Pathog Research Article The pathology associated with malaria infection is largely due to the ability of infected human RBCs to adhere to a number of receptors on endothelial cells within tissues and organs. This phenomenon is driven by the export of parasite-encoded proteins to the host cell, the exact function of many of which is still unknown. Here we inactivate the function of one of these exported proteins, PFA66, a member of the J-domain protein family. Although parasites lacking this protein were still able to grow in cell culture, we observed severe defects in normal host cell modification, including aberrant morphology of surface knobs, disrupted presentation of the cytoadherence molecule PfEMP1, and a total lack of cytoadherence, despite the presence of the knob associated protein KAHRP. Complementation assays demonstrate that an intact J-domain is required for recovery to a wild-type phenotype and suggest that PFA66 functions in concert with a HSP70 to carry out host cell modification. Strikingly, this HSP70 is likely to be of host origin. ATPase assays on recombinant protein verify a functional interaction between PFA66 and residual host cell HSP70. Taken together, our data reveal a role for PFA66 in host cell modification, strongly implicate human HSP70s as being essential in this process and uncover a new KAHRP-independent molecular factor required for correct knob biogenesis. Public Library of Science 2021-10-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8544838/ /pubmed/34614006 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009969 Text en © 2021 Diehl et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Diehl, Mathias
Roling, Lena
Rohland, Lukas
Weber, Sebastian
Cyrklaff, Marek
Sanchez, Cecilia P.
Beretta, Carlo A.
Simon, Caroline S.
Guizetti, Julien
Hahn, Julia
Schulz, Norma
Mayer, Matthias P.
Przyborski, Jude M.
Co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence
title Co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence
title_full Co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence
title_fullStr Co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence
title_full_unstemmed Co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence
title_short Co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence
title_sort co-chaperone involvement in knob biogenesis implicates host-derived chaperones in malaria virulence
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8544838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34614006
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1009969
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