Plasmodium Life Cycle
Mark F. Wiserhttp://www.tulane.edu/~wiser/malaria/
MALARIA
40% of the world’s population lives in endemic areas3-500 million clinical cases per year1.5-2.7 million deaths (90% Africa)increasing problem (re-emerging disease)resurgence in some areasdrug resistance ( mortality) P. falciparum P. vivax P. malariae P. ovalecausative agent = Plasmodium species protozoan parasite member of Apicomplexa 4 species infecting humans transmitted by anopholine mosquitoes
Life Cycle
sporozoites injected during mosquito feeding invade liver cells exoerythrocytic schizogony (merozoites) merozoites invade RBCs repeated erythrocytic schizogony cycles gametocytes infective for mosquito fusion of gametes in gut sporogony on gut wall in hemocoel sporozoites invade salivary glandsAnopheles
Transmissionsporozoites injected with saliva enter circulation trapped by liver (receptor-ligand)
Exoerythrocytic Schizogony
hepatocyte invasion asexual replication 6-15 days 1000-10,000 merozoites no overt pathology
Hyponozoite Forms
some EE forms exhibit delayed replication (ie, dormant) merozoites produced months after initial infection only P. vivax and P. ovalerelapse = hypnozoite recrudescence = subpatentt
Erythrocytic Stage
intracellular parasite undergoes trophic phaseyoung trophozoite called ‘ring form’ingests host hemoglobincytostomefood vacuolehemozoin (malarial pigment)Erythrocytic Schizogony
nuclear division = begin schizont stage 6-40 nuclei budding merozoites = segmenter erythrocyte rupture releases merozoites blood stage results in disease symptomsClinical Features
characterized by acute febrile attacks (malaria paroxysms) periodic episodes of fever alternating with symptom-free periods manifestations and severity depend on species and host status immunity, general health, nutritional state, genetics recrudescences and relapses can occur over months or years can develop severe complications (especially P. falciparum)paroxysms associated with synchrony of merozoite release between paroxysms temper-ature is normal and patient feels well falciparum may not exhibit classic paroxysms (continuous fever)
Malaria Paroxysm
tertian malaria quartan malaria
gametocytes
erythrocytic schizogony 48 hr in Pf, Pv, Po 72 hr in PmGametocytogenesis
alternative to asexual replicationinduction factors not knowndrug treatment #'simmune response #'sring gametocytePf : ~10 daysothers: ~same as schizogonysexual dimorphismmicrogametocytesmacrogametocytesno pathologyinfective stage for mosquitoGametogenesis
occurs in mosquito gut‘exflagellation’ most obvious3X nuclear replication8 microgametes formedexposure to air induces temperature (2-3oC) pH (8-8.3)result of pCO2 gametoctye activating factor in mosquitoxanthurenic acidSporogony
occurs in mosquito (9-21 d)fusion of micro- and macrogametes zygote ookinete (~24 hr)ookinete transverses gut epithelium ('trans-invasion')Sporogony
ookinete oocystbetween epithelium and basal laminaasexual replication sporozoitessporozoites releasedSporogony
sporozoites migrate through hemocoel sporozoites 'invade' salivary glandsInvasive Stages Merozoite erythrocytes Sporozoite salivary glands hepatocytes Ookinete epithelium
P.vivax ring stage
schizont vivax-ovaleP.ovale troph.
P.ovale schizontGametocyte
p.Malariae ring stageMalariae schizont
pPpPPP.falciparum