EXP1 is critical for nutrient uptake across the parasitophorous vacuole membrane of malaria parasites

Mesén-Ramírez, Paolo and Bergmann, Bärbel and Tran, Thuy Tuyen and Garten, Matthias and Stäcker, Jan and Naranjo-Prado, Isabel and Höhn, Katharina and Zimmerberg, Joshua and Spielmann, Tobias and de Koning-Ward, Tania F. (2019) EXP1 is critical for nutrient uptake across the parasitophorous vacuole membrane of malaria parasites. PLOS Biology, 17 (9). e3000473. ISSN 1545-7885

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Abstract

Intracellular malaria parasites grow in a vacuole delimited by the parasitophorous vacuolar membrane (PVM). This membrane fulfils critical roles for survival of the parasite in its intracellular niche such as in protein export and nutrient acquisition. Using a conditional knockout (KO), we here demonstrate that the abundant integral PVM protein exported protein 1 (EXP1) is essential for parasite survival but that this is independent of its previously postulated function as a glutathione S-transferase (GST). Patch-clamp experiments indicated that EXP1 is critical for the nutrient-permeable channel activity at the PVM. Loss of EXP1 abolished the correct localisation of EXP2, a pore-forming protein required for the nutrient-permeable channel activity and protein export at the PVM. Unexpectedly, loss of EXP1 affected only the nutrient-permeable channel activity of the PVM but not protein export. Parasites with low levels of EXP1 became hypersensitive to low nutrient conditions, indicating that EXP1 indeed is needed for nutrient uptake and experimentally confirming the long-standing hypothesis that the channel activity measured at the PVM is required for parasite nutrient acquisition. Hence, EXP1 is specifically required for the functional expression of EXP2 as the nutrient-permeable channel and is critical for the metabolite supply of malaria parasites.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Library Keep > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@librarykeep.com
Date Deposited: 04 Feb 2023 08:53
Last Modified: 02 Jan 2024 13:15
URI: http://archive.jibiology.com/id/eprint/68

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