4.5 Article

Plasmodium vivax binds host CD98hc (SLC3A2) to enter immature red blood cells

Journal

NATURE MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 8, Pages 991-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41564-021-00939-3

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Funding

  1. National Research Foundation, Immunomonitoring Service Platform ISP [NRF2017_SISFP09]
  2. Singapore National Medical Research Council [NMRC/CBRG/0047/2013]
  3. Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR, Singapore) Young Investigator Grant (BMRC YIG) [13/1/16/YA/009]
  4. SIgN from A*STAR, NUHS Start-up grant [NUHSRO/2018/006/SU/01]
  5. MOE Tier 1 [NUHSRO/2018/094/T1/SEED-NOV/04]
  6. Singapore National Medical Research Council IRG grant [NMRC/OFIRG/0065/2018]
  7. Singapore Immunology Network core research grant
  8. Horizontal Programme on Infectious Diseases under A*STAR
  9. SMRU- The Wellcome Trust of Great Britain as part of the Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Programme of Wellcome Trust-Mahidol University
  10. MOE Tier 1 Grant through the Singapore University of Technology Design [T1MOE1702]
  11. Marsden Grant Sub-award through the University of Otago [RGUOO180301]
  12. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship
  13. Duke-NUS Medical School
  14. Singapore's Health and Biomedical Sciences (HBMS) Industry Alignment Fund Pre-Positioning (IAF-PP) [H18/01/a0/018]

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This study identified CD98 heavy chain as a receptor for the PvRBP2a parasite ligand, further demonstrating its role in P. vivax reticulocyte invasion. The interaction between CD98 and PvRBP2a suggests its potential as a vaccine target against P. vivax malaria.
More than one-third of the world's population is exposed to Plasmodium vivax malaria, mainly in Asia(1). P. vivax preferentially invades reticulocytes (immature red blood cells)(2-4). Previous work has identified 11 parasite proteins involved in reticulocyte invasion, including erythrocyte binding protein 2 (ref. (5)) and the reticulocyte-binding proteins (PvRBPs)(6-10). PvRBP2b binds to the transferrin receptor CD71 (ref. (11)), which is selectively expressed on immature reticulocytes(12). Here, we identified CD98 heavy chain (CD98), a heteromeric amino acid transporter from the SLC3 family (also known as SLCA2), as a reticulocyte-specific receptor for the PvRBP2a parasite ligand using mass spectrometry, flow cytometry, biochemical and parasite invasion assays. We characterized the expression level of CD98 at the surface of immature reticulocytes (CD71(+)) and identified an interaction between CD98 and PvRBP2a expressed at the merozoite surface. Our results identify CD98 as an additional host membrane protein, besides CD71, that is directly associated with P. vivax reticulocyte tropism. These findings highlight the potential of using PvRBP2a as a vaccine target against P. vivax malaria.

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