Journal article
Cooperativity between Plasmodium falciparum adhesive proteins for invasion into erythrocytes
TM Desimone, CV Jennings, AK Bei, C Comeaux, BI Coleman, P Refour, T Triglia, J Stubbs, AF Cowman, MT Duraisingh
Molecular Microbiology | WILEY | Published : 2009
Abstract
Plasmodium falciparum is the most virulent of the Plasmodium species infective to humans. Different P. falciparum strains vary in their dependence on erythrocyte receptors for invasion and their ability to switch in their utilization of different receptor repertoires. Members of the reticulocyte-binding protein-like (RBL) family of invasion ligands are postulated to play a central role in defining ligand-receptor interactions, known as invasion pathways. Here we report the targeted gene disruption of PfRh2b and PfRh2a in W2mef, a parasite strain that is heavily dependent on sialic-acid receptors for invasion, and show that the PfRh2b ligand is functional in this parasite background. Like the..
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Awarded by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by NIH Grant R01AI057919 (Duraisingh). We thank Jeff Dvorin for critical reading of the manuscript.