51. Transferrin receptor 1 is a reticulocyte-specific receptor for Plasmodium vivax
- Author
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Nicholas T.Y. Lim, Christoph Q. Schmidt, James M. Murphy, Usheer Kanjee, Marcelo U. Ferreira, Yee-Foong Mok, Michael D. W. Griffin, Kanlaya Sriprawat, Manoj T. Duraisingh, Brian J. Smith, Jonathan Abraham, Bruce Russell, Melissa J. Call, Maria J. Menezes, Gabriel W. Rangel, Laurent Rénia, Wai-Hong Tham, Li Jin Chan, Sebastien Menant, Jakub Gruszczyk, Benoit Malleret, Michael P. Weekes, Kai-Min Lin, Richard D. Pearson, Gruszczyk, Jakub [0000-0003-4536-2964], Kanjee, Usheer [0000-0002-3169-4557], Chan, Li-Jin [0000-0002-9439-3487], Malleret, Benoit [0000-0001-9658-7528], Mok, Yee-Foong [0000-0002-4252-9426], Lin, Kai-Min [0000-0003-2109-1530], Pearson, Richard D [0000-0002-7386-3566], Rangel, Gabriel [0000-0002-8208-2817], Smith, Brian J [0000-0003-0498-1910], Call, Melissa J [0000-0001-7684-5841], Weekes, Michael P [0000-0003-3196-5545], Sriprawat, Kanlaya [0000-0003-2968-1770], Russell, Bruce [0000-0003-2333-4348], Renia, Laurent [0000-0003-0349-1557], Tham, Wai-Hong [0000-0001-7950-8699], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Reticulocytes ,medicine.drug_class ,030231 tropical medicine ,Plasmodium vivax ,Protozoan Proteins ,Host tropism ,Transferrin receptor ,Biology ,Monoclonal antibody ,Crystallography, X-Ray ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,03 medical and health sciences ,PLASMODIUM FALCIPARUM ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reticulocyte ,Protein Domains ,Antigens, CD ,parasitic diseases ,Receptors, Transferrin ,medicine ,Malaria, Vivax ,Humans ,Receptor ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Multidisciplinary ,Membrane Proteins ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,3. Good health ,Red blood cell ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Transferrin ,Gene Knockdown Techniques - Abstract
Vivax malaria host receptor Human malaria is caused by half a dozen species of Plasmodium protozoan parasites, each with distinctive biology. P. vivax , which causes relapsing malaria, specifically parasitizes immature red blood cells called reticulocytes. Gruszczyk et al. identified TfR1 (host transferrin receptor 1) as an alternative receptor for P. vivax . TfR1 binds to a specific P. vivax surface protein. However, the parasite that causes cerebral malaria, P. falciparum , does not share TfR1 as a receptor: P. falciparum could still infect cells in which TfR1 expression was knocked down, but P. vivax could not. Monoclonal antibodies to the P. vivax protein successfully hindered P. vivax infection of red blood cells. Science , this issue p. 48
- Published
- 2018