The phylum Apicomplexa comprises more than 5000 unicellular eukaryotes. It includes some of the most important pathogenic parasites of man and animals, the deadliest of which is the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, responsible for half a million human deaths per year in many tropical and subtropical countries. Human pathogens also include Toxoplasma, a prominent cause of human congenital infections, and Cryptosporidium, one of four pathogens responsible for severe diarrhea in infants. Apicomplexa are strictly intracellular and their mechanisms of invasion and intracellular survival involve the secretion of virulence factors from secretory organelles called Rhoptries.
Rhoptries are large vesicles docked at the apical end of the parasite, ready for fusion with the parasite plasma membrane (PPM) upon contacting the host cell. In contrast with the exocytosis of synaptic and dense-core vesicles in mammals, the secretory material (proteins and lipids) of rhoptries is not released outside the cell, instead it is injected directly inside the host. In fact, rhoptries proteins act as bacterial effectors, but the mechanisms of their release and injection into the host are different from bacteria (genes encoding prokaryotic secretion systems are not conserved in Apicomplexa). Moreover, conventional exocytic factors described in mammals are not associated with rhoptry exocytosis. Overall, rhoptry secretion mechanisms are unknown and clearly distinct from those controlling secretion in bacteria and in classic eukaryotic model systems, i.e. yeast and animals.
KissAndSpitRhoptry aims to dissect the structure, the molecular components and the mechanistic steps that allow the parasite to inject virulence factors. The specific objectives are 1- to explore the mechanisms that trigger rhoptry exocytosis upon binding of the parasite to the host cell, 2- to provide insights into the machinery of fusion of rhoptries with the PPM, and 3- to decipher how the rhoptry content crosses the host membrane.
Understanding this essential mechanism will address an untouched topic of central importance, which will greatly impact our understanding of exocytosis in early-diverging eukaryotes, and offer new concepts in the transport of proteins across membranes by nanomachines. It may also have a major translational impact for the development of new strategies targeting Apicomplexa pathogens, in particular in feeding research on malaria treatment, prevention and eradication.