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Blood, 1 August 2007, Vol. 110, No. 3, pp. 795-796.
Gluing spectrin togetherUNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
A malarial parasite protein stabilizes red cell membrane and inhibits further parasite invasion.
Pei and colleagues use recombinant peptides to map amino acids 663 through 770 of the 115-kilodalton (kDa) RESA protein into binding the sixteenth repeat of ß-spectrin, a repeat known to reside at the tetramer interface of spectrin. By surface-plasmon resonance, binding stoichiometry is shown to be 1:1 with a submicromolar dissociation constant. Importantly, non-denaturing gel electrophoresis on extracted erythrocyte spectrin showed that treatment with the RESA peptide shifted the spectrin dimer–tetramer ratio in favor of the more membrane-stabilizing tetramer. Consistent with this, erythrocyte ghosts that had been lysed and resealed to entrap the RESA peptide were found to possess greater membrane stability when exposed to fluid shear using an ektacytometer. Finally, the same RESA-containing ghosts also proved more resistant to P falciparum invasion. These results, in combination with a previous report linking RESA with increased erythrocyte thermostability, clearly demonstrate that binding of RESA to spectrin increases the overall stability of the spectrin tetramer and endows enhanced erythrocyte resistance to mechanical as well as thermal stress. This increased stability might well protect the parasite under the feverish conditions that accompany infection, but the authors also provide clear evidence that the increased membrane stability mechanically inhibits reinfection of erythrocytes already harboring parasites, thus maximizing the spread of the infection. New targets of opportunity in malaria might well arise from such detailed insight, but the findings also illustrate the broad importance of the spectrin cytoskeleton and modifications to it in red-cell pathophysiology.
Footnotes
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
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