Transgenic Anopheles mosquitoes expressing human PAI-1 impair malaria transmission

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作者
Tales V. Pascini
Yeong Je Jeong
Wei Huang
Zarna R. Pala
Juliana M. Sá
Michael B. Wells
Christopher Kizito
Brendan Sweeney
Thiago L. Alves e Silva
Deborah J. Andrew
Marcelo Jacobs-­Lorena
Joel Vega-Rodríguez
机构
[1] National Institutes of Health,Laboratory of Malaria and Vector Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
[2] Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health,Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Malaria Research Institute
[3] Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,Department of Cell Biology
[4] Idaho College of Osteopathic Medicine,Department of Biomedical Sciences
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Nature Communications | / 13卷
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摘要
In mammals, the serine protease plasmin degrades extracellular proteins during blood clot removal, tissue remodeling, and cell migration. The zymogen plasminogen is activated into plasmin by two serine proteases: tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), a process regulated by plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), a serine protease inhibitor that specifically inhibits tPA and uPA. Plasmodium gametes and sporozoites use tPA and uPA to activate plasminogen and parasite-bound plasmin degrades extracellular matrices, facilitating parasite motility in the mosquito and the mammalian host. Furthermore, inhibition of plasminogen activation by PAI-1 strongly blocks infection in both hosts. To block parasite utilization of plasmin, we engineered Anopheles stephensi transgenic mosquitoes constitutively secreting human PAI-1 (huPAI-1) in the midgut lumen, in the saliva, or both. Mosquitoes expressing huPAI-1 strongly reduced rodent and human Plasmodium parasite transmission to mosquitoes, showing that co-opting plasmin for mosquito infection is a conserved mechanism among Plasmodium species. huPAI-1 expression in saliva induced salivary gland deformation which affects sporozoite invasion and P. berghei transmission to mice, resulting in significant levels of protection from malaria. Targeting the interaction of malaria parasites with the fibrinolytic system using genetically engineered mosquitoes could be developed as an intervention to control malaria transmission.
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