Litcius/Paper detail

Moving on: How malaria parasites exit the liver

Mattea Scheiner, Paul‐Christian Burda, Alyssa Ingmundson

2023Molecular Microbiology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

An essential step in the life cycle of malaria parasites is their egress from hepatocytes, which enables the transition from the asymptomatic liver stage to the pathogenic blood stage of infection. To exit the liver, Plasmodium parasites first disrupt the parasitophorous vacuole membrane that surrounds them during their intracellular replication. Subsequently, parasite-filled structures called merosomes emerge from the infected cell. Shrouded by host plasma membrane, like in a Trojan horse, parasites enter the vasculature undetected by the host immune system and travel to the lung where merosomes rupture, parasites are released, and the blood infection stage begins. This complex, multi-step process must be carefully orchestrated by the parasite and requires extensive manipulation of the infected host cell. This review aims to outline the known signaling pathways that trigger exit, highlight Plasmodium proteins that contribute to the release of liver-stage merozoites, and summarize the accompanying changes to the hepatic host cell.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPlasmodium (life cycle)MalariaParasite hostingCell biologyIntracellular parasiteImmune systemImmunologyHost (biology)VirologyIntracellularGeneticsComputer scienceWorld Wide WebMalaria Research and ControlDrug Transport and Resistance MechanismsMosquito-borne diseases and control