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Wrap up antimalarial treatment

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Title: Wrap up antimalarial treatment


1
  • Wrap up anti-malarial treatment drug resistance
  • Babesia Theileria, tick transmitted
    apicomplexan parasites
  • Theileria hijacks several host cell functions to
    spread within the host and cause disease

2
Chloroquine the wonder drug
  • During its development within the RBC the malaria
    parasite ingests the cytoplasm of its host cell
  • Note that in this schematic (and in real
    micrographs) the red color of the blood cell gets
    considerably lighter -- at the same time malaria
    pigment accumulates
  • The parasite digests large ammounts of hemoglobin
    to cover part of its amino acid needs

3
Chloroquine the wonder drug
  • RBC cytoplasm is taken up by endocytosis
  • The endocytosis vesicle fuse with the food
    vacuole (a homolog of the secondary lysosome)
    were hemoglobin digestion occurs
  • Digestion frees large ammounts of heme
  • Heme is toxic to the parasite and is neutralized
    by polymerization into the malaria pigment or
    hemozoin
  • Chloroquine accumulates in the food vacuole (its
    a weak base and like all lysosomes the FV is an
    acidic compartment)
  • Chloroquine is thought to interfere with the
    polymerization and detoxification of heme

4
Resistance to chloroquine
1965
1960
1978
1989
http//www.tigr.org/tdb/edb/pfdb/CQR.html
5
Mechanisms of drug resistance
  • Changes in target enzyme (e.g. decreased affinity
    to drug)
  • Over-expression of target (amplification)
  • Decreased activation of drug
  • Changes in accessibility (less import, or more
    export of drug)

6
Resistance to chloroquine
  • Chloroquine resistance is associated with
    decreased accumulation of the drug in the food
    vacuole
  • Genetic studies have shown that resistance is
    linked to the integral membrane protein PfCRT
  • This putative transporter localizes to the
    membrane of the food vacuole
  • Studies using parasite cultures suggests that a
    series of point mutations in PfCRT are
    responsible for resistance
  • Large field studies have found strong association
    of these mutations with chloroquine resistance
  • Currently the exact physiological function of
    PfCRT is unknown

PfCRT, resistance mutations highlighted
7
Antifolates as malaria drugs
  • The synthesis of certain building blocks of DNA
    requires reduced folate (more specifically the
    syntheisis of dTMP)
  • No reduced folate -- no DNA
  • The malaria drug Fansidar uses a drug combination
    to hit the same target pathway twice
  • Combinations that are more effective than the sum
    of their individual activities are called
    synergistic

8
Antifolates as malaria drugs
Parasite
Folate synthesis
Dihydrofolate
Folate recharging
Tetrahydrofolate
9
Antifolates as malaria drugs
Parasite
Human
Folate synthesis
Dihydrofolate
Dihydrofolate
Nucleotide synthesis
Folate recharging
Tetrahydrofolate
Tetrahydrofolate
10
Antifolates as malaria drugs
Parasite
Human
Folate synthesis
Sulfonamide
Dihydrofolate
Dihydrofolate
Nucleotide synthesis
Folate recharging
Tetrahydrofolate
Tetrahydrofolate
11
Antifolates as malaria drugs
Human
Dihydrofolate
Nucleotide synthesis
Tetrahydrofolate
12
Antifolates as malaria drugs
  • First strike Folate synthesis. We cant make
    folate and take it up with food as a vitamin. The
    parasite makes it and is therefore susceptible to
    sulfonamides which block synthesis
  • Second strike After each use dihydrofolate has
    to be reduced again (think of it as recharging).
    The enzyme which does this (dihydrofolate
    reductase) is different in human and parasite
  • The drug pyrimethamine inhibits parasite DHFR but
    not human DHFR
  • Fansidar combines pyrimethamine with sulfadoxine
  • A very similar drug combination is used to treat
    toxoplasmosis

13
Antifolate resistance developed very fast (5
years)
14
Combinations of Artemisinin and other
antimalarial are promising
  • Extracts of Artemisia annua (sweet wormwood) have
    long been used in traditional Chinese medicine to
    treat fever
  • Chinese investigators extracted the active
    ingredients and showed that they and there
    chemical modifications are powerful
    anti-malarials
  • However mono-therapy results in high level of
    recrudescence
  • Combining Artemisinin with other drugs have been
    very successful especially for severe malaria
  • Artemisinin acts very fast which helps to reduce
    mortality and get patients out of their coma
    quickly

15
Piroplasms Babesia Theileria
16
Piroplasms
  • Piroplasms or Piroplasmida are an order of the
    Apicomplexa
  • They are very small parasites of mammals and
    ticks
  • There are two genera which cause import disease
    in livestock (and occasionally in humans)
    Babesia Theileria

17
Babesia
  • Numerous species which cause malaria like disease
    in wide variety of animals
  • We will only discuss B. bigemina a parasite of
    cattle (however note that there are occasional
    infections in humans by other Babesia species)

18
Devastating outbreaks follow the big cattle drives
  • In the 1860s and 1870s Texas longhorns were
    driven in huge numbers to the railheads in Kansas
    (from there they went by train to the
    slaughterhouses of Chicago and other big nothern
    cities)
  • Farmers in Kansas and Missouri were plagued by
    outbreaks of Texas fever in their herds which
    they linked to the cattle drives
  • Several standoffs ensued as local farmers tried
    to block drives
  • Theobald Smith and Frederick Kilbourne show
    (1889-1893) that the disease is caused by a
    protozoan parasite transmitted by ticks (first
    disease shown to be transmitted by an arthropode)

19
Babesia bigemina causes Texas cattle fever
  • Mortality in acute untreated cattle 50-90
  • Rapid rise in temperature (105-108 F)
  • Fever persists for a week or more
  • Loss of appetite, dull, listless
  • Severe anemia due to rapid loss of red blood
    cells
  • Hemoglobinuria (red colored urine) due to massive
    RBC lysis
  • Infected RBCs adhere to vasculature of organs
    (likely similar in mechanisms to Plasmodium)
  • Evidence for comparable clonal antigenic
    variation
  • Cattle may die within 3-8 days

B. bigemina
20
Babesia bigemina causes Texas cattle fever
  • Older cattle is much more likely to develop
    severe disease than calves
  • In endemic areas calves get infected and
    mortality is low
  • In the case of epidemics adults without previous
    exposure get infected resulting in massive loss
  • This explains the massive loss of cattle in
    Kansas despite the fact that the longhorns coming
    from Texas (where the disease was endemic) seemed
    perfectly healthy
  • What makes the difference between Texas Kansas?

21
Distribution of Tick fever caused by B. bigemina
Babesiosis coincides with the distribution of the
main vector ticks Boophilus annulatus microplus
(Winter temperatures limit distribution)
22
Babesia
  • Merozoites (piroplasms) multiply in RBCs of the
    mamalian host
  • Tick takes up sexual stages with blood meal,
    gamete formation, fertilization
  • Kinetes infect various organs of the tick
    including ovary (transovarial infection of next
    generation of ticks)
  • In the larvae the kinetes invade salivary gland
    cells, massive replication results in the
    production of ten thousands of sporozoites which
    are injected upon feeding

23
Boophilus is a single host tick
  • In the U.S. Mexico Babesia bigemina is
    transmitted by Boophilus annulatus
  • Boophilus are one host ticks larvae hatch from
    the eggs on the ground and attach to a host
  • Ticks stay on host and feed and molt several
    times until they are adults
  • Engorged and fertilized female drops of to lay
    eggs and dies
  • Transovarial infection is very important for
    effective transmission in one host ticks

24
Disease control is mostly through vector control
  • Disease can be treated with drugs
  • A partially effective attenuated vaccine is
    available
  • Tick control mostly through pesticide application
    remains the most important counter measure

25
Vaccination of cows with an antigen from the tick
midgut
Antigen Bm86
  • Proteins found on the surface of the gut
    epithelium of Boophilus ticks have be
    characterized and used to make a recombinant
    vaccine (against the tick not the parasite)
  • Ticks fed on vaccinated cows are exposed to
    antibody/complement mediated attack of their
    epithelium
  • These tick grow poorly and have low fecundity

gut
Salivary gland
Host
vaccinated
normal
26
Border Cowboys patrol the U.S. Mexican border for
ticks
  • Boophilus ticks and with them the Texas tick
    fever have been eradicated from the Southern U.S.
    but they are still present in Central America
  • USDA employs 60 cowboys which patrol the Southern
    border to find and check stray-cattle for ticks
    to prevent the reintroduction
  • See short New York Times feature on border
    cowboys posted on the class web site

Eddie Dillard, left, and Jack Gilpin are tick
riders (NYT 7/03)
27
Theileria
  • Life cycle and transmission of Theileria
  • Host cell invasion by Theileria -- what are the
    differences to Toxoplasma
  • East coast fever and tropical theileriosis
  • Theileria manipulates its host cells

28
Theileria
  • Infects mainly ruminants (cattle, goats, sheep,
    deer)
  • Several different species causing both pathogenic
    and benign disease
  • Infection in wild animals is mostly asymptomatic

cattle disease
Cape buffalo reservoir
29
T. parva T. annulata
30
Distribution of theileriosis
red T. annulata 250 million cattle at
risk orange T. parva 50 million cattle
at risk grey T. buffeli/orientalis/sergenti
relatively benign
31
Life cycle of Theileria spec.
  • Life cycle in tick similar to that of Babesia
  • However, no transovarial transmission (vectors
    are multi-host ticks)
  • Two different cell types are infected in the
    mammalian blood stream (initially leukocytes
    later on RBCs)
  • Infection of RBCs is important for transmission
    and infection of lymphocytes is important for
    pathology
  • T. parva (mostly T-cells), T. annulata (B-cells,
    macrophages)

32
Two stages are found in the bovine host Kochs
bodies and piroplasms
  • Kochs bodies, infected lymphocytes
  • Piroplasms, infected red blood cells

33
Theileria (sporozoite) invasion differs from
Toxoplasma invasion
34
Theileria invasion
  • Zipper mechanism of entry into lymphocyte
  • Escape from vacuole into cytoplas coincides with
    rhopthry microneme discharge
  • Parasites free in the cytoplasm associate with
    host MT
  • Animated version

35
The Theileria paradox
  • Although Theileria replicates in lymphocytes
    these cells seem to proliferate enormously in
    infected animals (most of these proliferating
    lymphocytes are infected) -- this is in contrast
    to other infections like malaria or babesiosis
    where parasite replication is associated with the
    decline of the host cell population causing
    anemia
  • Also, the sporozoite (injected by the tick)
    appears to be the only stage capable of invading
    lymphocytes
  • How can the parasite spread to new lymphocytes?
  • The trick Theileria hijacks and exploits two key
    features of the lymphocytes cell biology cell
    division and growth control

36
Divide conquer
37
Divide conquer
  • Parasites do not egress from (and in the process
    destroy) their host cells and infect new
    lymphocytes but proliferate along with them
  • The tight association of parasites with host cell
    microtubules ensures that they are segregated by
    the host cell mitotic spindle between the two
    daughter cells
  • A recently divided infected lymphocyte (the arrow
    indicates the cleavage furrow at which
    cytokinesis occurred. Blue (DNA), red (host cell
    centrioles), green (parasite surface membrane),
    HN (host nucleus)

38
Theileriosis is a lympho-proliferative disease
  • Recall the immunology lecture -- lymphocytes are
    usually arrested and only expand upon antigen
    presentation
  • If parasite replication requires host cell
    replication the parasite has to somehow induce
    proliferation of its host cells
  • Indeed theileriosis is a lympho-proliferative
    disease
  • Swelling and proliferation of the lymph node
    draining the bite site is the first sign of
    disease

39
Pathology is mainly due to lymphoproliferation
  • Lymphocytes proliferate heavily invading multiple
    organs causing disease similar to a lymphoma
    (cancer of lymphocytes)
  • (Top) Infiltration of kidney by Theileria parva
    infected lymphocytes
  • (Bottom) Abdominal ulcers due to transformed
    lymphocytes
  • Death is in most cases due to infiltration of the
    lung resulting in lung edema (the abnormal build
    up of fluid within the lung)

40
Theileria infected cells show characteristics of
transformation
  • Theileria infection seems to share many of the
    features seen in the transformation of normal
    cells into cancer cells
  • Uncontrolled growth
  • Loss of differentiation
  • Immortalization (infected cells taken into
    culture will grow indefinitely)
  • Growth in the absence of external growth factors
  • Enhanced ability to migrate and to infiltrate
    organs
  • When cells are cured from parasite infection they
    die (by apoptosis -- this suicide response is
    usually suppressed in cancer cells)

41
How does Theileria interfere with lymphocyte
growth and cause cancer?
42
NF-kB -- a major regulator of lymphocyte growth
  • NFkB (nuclear factor, p50 p65) is an important
    and very well studied transcription factor (a
    protein that interacts with the promoter of genes
    and stimulates gene expression)
  • It is a major player in the stimulation and
    clonal expansion of lymphcytes (among other
    functions)
  • NFkB is bound by IkB (its inhibitor) which
    sequesters it in the cytoplasm and keeps it
    inactive
  • Phosphorylation followed by ubiquitinylation and
    degradation of IkB leads to import into the
    nucleus and transcriptional activity
  • Theileria interferes with this pathway by causing
    the destruction of IkB

43
The IKK complex
  • IkB is tagged for destruction by phosphorylation
    through the IKK complex
  • In the lymphocytes this provides a way to relay
    the reception of signals from the surface of the
    cell to gene expression
  • Theileria hijacks and activates the IKK signaling
    complex independent of the usually required
    external stimulation

44
Hijacking and activation of IKK transforms
infected cells
  • Theileria parasites (green) interact with and
    activate IKK (red) of their host lymphocytes
  • IKK tags IkB for destruction
  • NfKb free of its inhibitor enters the nucleus and
    cells start dividing rapidly

45
(No Transcript)
46
summary
  • Theileria sporozoites invade using a zippering
    mechanism
  • The PV is lysed upon rhoptry secretion and the
    parasites resides in the cytoplasm and associates
    with the host cells microtubuli centrosomes
  • When the host cell divides the parasite divides
    and segregates alongside using the host cells
    mitotic machinery
  • Theileria schizonts transform their hosts
    lyphocytes (induce uncontrolled cancer-like
    growth)
  • Transformation is parasite dependent and
    reversible
  • Parasites interfere with NFkB growth control by
    activating the IKK signalling pathway
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