PLoS ONE (Aug 2008)

Formation of the food vacuole in Plasmodium falciparum: a potential role for the 19 kDa fragment of merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP1(19)).

  • Anton R Dluzewski,
  • Irene T Ling,
  • John M Hopkins,
  • Munira Grainger,
  • Gabriele Margos,
  • Graham H Mitchell,
  • Anthony A Holder,
  • Lawrence H Bannister

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0003085
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 8
p. e3085

Abstract

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Plasmodium falciparum Merozoite Surface Protein 1 (MSP1) is synthesized during schizogony as a 195-kDa precursor that is processed into four fragments on the parasite surface. Following a second proteolytic cleavage during merozoite invasion of the red blood cell, most of the protein is shed from the surface except for the C-terminal 19-kDa fragment (MSP1(19)), which is still attached to the merozoite via its GPI-anchor. We have examined the fate of MSP1(19) during the parasite's subsequent intracellular development using immunochemical analysis of metabolically labeled MSP1(19), fluorescence imaging, and immuno-electronmicroscopy. Our data show that MSP1(19) remains intact and persists to the end of the intracellular cycle. This protein is the first marker for the biogenesis of the food vacuole; it is rapidly endocytosed into small vacuoles in the ring stage, which coalesce to form the single food vacuole containing hemozoin, and persists into the discarded residual body. The food vacuole is marked by the presence of both MSP1(19) and the chloroquine resistance transporter (CRT) as components of the vacuolar membrane. Newly synthesized MSP1 is excluded from the vacuole. This behavior indicates that MSP1(19) does not simply follow a classical lysosome-like clearance pathway, instead, it may play a significant role in the biogenesis and function of the food vacuole throughout the intra-erythrocytic phase.