Fig 1.
Replication of human and rodent Plasmodium parasites during exoerythrocytic and erythrocytic development.
(A) Plasmodium life cycle with emphasis on the exoerythrocytic (liver) and erythrocytic (red blood cell) stages within the vertebrate host. Parasite development in the mosquito is symbolized by the depicted mosquito but is not shown. In the scheme, important exoerythrocytic (invaded sporozoite, trophozoite, schizont, and merozoites) and erythrocytic stages (ring, trophozoite, schizont, free merozoites, and gametocytes) are indicated (created with BioRender.com). (B) The table summarizes the main characteristics and morphological features of human (P. falciparum, P. vivax) and rodent (P. berghei, P. yoelii) Plasmodium parasites. Information is from [36,89,90,126] and also referred in the 2.2.2 section. LS, liver stage.
Fig 2.
Schematic representation of Plasmodium cell division and development during the LS.
Typical features and molecular details of P. falciparum and P. berghei (Pf/Pb) during the entire LS development are indicated as “Parasite stage” from (a) to (i) and the “Cell division status” section are indicated for each parasite stage. The duration of development “Time post-sporozoite invasion (Pf/Pb)” indicates the in vivo Plasmodium LS development. Horizontal brackets assemble drawings that represent the “Cell division status” of the parasite. (a) Upon productive invasion of a hepatocyte (light blue) the parasite (pink) resides within a PV surrounded by the PVM (light blue). Initially, the parasite remains in G0, 1N but expands in size. Parasite organelles are depicted as follows: nucleus (blue), apicoplast (green), and mitochondria (red). (b) The dedifferentiation phase starts when the crescent-shape sporozoite transforms into a bulbous-shaped form that finally becomes a circular EEF trophozoite expanding in size and entering the G1 phase (c). (c’) A proportion of P. vivax and P. cynomolgi parasites do not develop further into schizonts but remain dormant (hypnozoite) as in G0 phase. (d) Schizogony is characterized by nuclei multiplication, and alternated DNA synthesis/mitosis (S/M) phases are triggered (DNA >1N). (e) During the process of schizogony, mitochondrion and apicoplast grow into highly branched structures. (f) The cytomere stage initiates merogony (merozoite formation). The PPM invaginates and the still singular mitochondrion organizes as a finger-like structure. The apicoplast locates between the nuclei and the surrounding PPM within parasite cytoplasm (left panel in (f)). Then, the apicoplast begins to form regular constrictions resulting in the fission of the organelle (right panel in (f)). (g) At the end of the cytomere stage, mitochondrion fission occurs prior to cytokinesis as depicted in the zoomed section. (h) Tens of thousands individual merozoites are formed, depending on the Plasmodium species, with each containing an individual set of organelles; cytokinesis signifies the end of LS merogony. (i) Finally, PVM rupture liberates merozoites into the host cytosol followed by host cell detachment and merosome formation (indicated by the merozoite-filled vesicle on top of the detached cell (created with BioRender.com). EEF, exoerythrocytic form; LS, liver stage; PPM, parasite plasma membrane; PVM, parasitophorous vacuole membrane.
Fig 3.
Parasite and host cell factors involved in sporozoite transformation into EEF represented as hierarchical events from mosquito to LS.
The dark gray circle summarizes parasite factors currently known to exert posttranscriptional and translational control on sporozoites within mosquito salivary glands. The light gray circle summarizes parasite and host cell factors shown to have an effect on sporozoite transformation into EEF within the host hepatocyte. Arrows indicate the hierarchical events happening from sporozoite latency in the mosquito to the early LS developmental gene expression within hepatocyte. Question marks show a hypothetical role of factors acting directly on the sporozoite to EEF transition. References are listed in Table 1: pumilio-2 (Puf2), sporozoite and LS asparagine-rich protein/sporozoite asparagine-rich protein (SLARP/SAP1), up-regulated in infective sporozoites 1/initiation factor 2 kinase (UIS1/IK2), up-regulated in infective sporozoites 2 (UIS2), eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 subunit alpha (eIF2α), AP2 domain transcription factor (AP2-L), liver-specific protein 2 (LISP2) and here for up-regulated in infective sporozoite 3 (UIS3) [127], up-regulated in infective sporozoite 4 (UIS4) [67], and here for liver-specific protein 1 (LISP1) [128], exported protein 1 (EXP1) [129], temperature and metabolites [28–30] (created with BioRender.com). EEF, exoerythrocytic form; LS, liver stage.
Table 1.
List of proteins involved in Plasmodium LS cell division and development mentioned within this review.
Fig 4.
Schematic representation of CPs with PbCen-4-GFP and nucleus behavior during LS Plasmodium schizogony.
The scheme from (a) to (j) represents Plasmodium nuclear and CP duplication and division through LS schizogony. Individual intracellular Plasmodium EEF (pink, from (b) to (i); green light in (a) and (j)) surrounded by the PVM (light gray) within a hepatocyte (light blue) and the parasite CP (dark green) that is represented as a dot proximal to the parasite nucleus (blue). Corresponding live cell confocal images to this scheme represent prominent Plasmodium LS developmental stages (hpi: hours post-sporozoite infection into host cell): as early schizont (a’), progression of schizogony (mid-schizogony) from (b’) to (c’), late schizogony/beginning of cytomere stage from (d’) to (i’), and finally end of merogony (merozoites formation) (j’). These images represent endogenous tagging of PbCen-4 (PBANKA_0941400, CP marker) in fusion with a GFP fluorescent marker at its C-terminus (GFP, green) during LS development. Parasite and host cell nucleus are stained with Hoechst 33342 (blue). The transgenic parasite line has been generated previously [8]. HeLa cells were infected with PbCen-4-GFP expressing salivary gland sporozoites. Images represent the progression of Plasmodium nuclear division through schizogony. For a better comprehension, 2 S/M asynchronous rounds where an early schizont stage duplicates its CP have been presented (b); the 2 CPs move at the opposite part of the starting duplicating nucleus (c), (d), from (b’) to (c’) and from (d’) to (i’) to finally be present as a dot close to each individual separated nuclei (e). The S/M alternative phases (represented by the arrow) are then repeated from (f) to (i) (second round of S/M represented here) until cytomere stage formation and merozoite formation in (j) and (j’). The scale bar for the early schizont image (a’) is 10 μm and for the late schizonts (from (b’) to (c’); from (d’) to (i’)) and end of merozoites formation (j’) is 20 μm (created with BioRender.com). CP, centriolar plaque; EEF, exoerythrocytic form; LS, liver stage; PVM, parasitophorous vacuole membrane.