Publication

Malaria hemozoin is immunologically inert but radically enhances innate responses by presenting malaria DNA to Toll-like receptor 9

Parroche, Peggy
Lauw, Fanny N.
Goutagny, Nadege
Latz, Eicke
Monks, Brian G.
Visintin, Alberto
Halmen, Kristen A.
Lamphier, Marc S.
Olivier, Martin
Bartholomeu, Daniella C.
... show 2 more
Embargo Expiration Date
Abstract

Hemozoin (HZ) is an insoluble crystal formed in the food vacuole of malaria parasites. HZ has been reported to induce inflammation by directly engaging Toll-like receptor (TLR) 9, an endosomal receptor. "Synthetic" HZ (beta-hematin), typically generated from partially purified extracts of bovine hemin, is structurally identical to natural HZ. When HPLC-purified hemin was used to synthesize the crystal, beta-hematin had no inflammatory activity. In contrast, natural HZ from Plasmodium falciparum cultures was a potent TLR9 inducer. Natural HZ bound recombinant TLR9 ectodomain, but not TLR2. Both TLR9 stimulation and TLR9 binding of HZ were abolished by nuclease treatment. PCR analysis demonstrated that natural HZ is coated with malarial but not human DNA. Purified malarial DNA activated TLR9 but only when DNA was targeted directly to the endosome with a transfection reagent. Stimulatory quantities of natural HZ containDNA; its potency in activating immune responses was even greater than transfecting malarial DNA. Thus, although the malarial genome is extremely AT-rich, its DNA is highly proinflammatory, with the potential to induce cytokinemia and fever during disease. However, its activity depends on being bound to HZ, which we propose amplifies the biological responses to malaria DNA by targeting it to a TLR9(+) intracellular compartment.

Source

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Feb 6;104(6):1919-24. Epub 2007 Jan 29. Link to article on publisher's site

Year of Medical School at Time of Visit
Sponsors
Dates of Travel
DOI
10.1073/pnas.0608745104
PubMed ID
17261807
Other Identifiers
Notes
Funding and Acknowledgements
Corresponding Author
Related Resources
Related Resources
Repository Citation
Rights
Distribution License