Nonopsonic monocyte/macrophage phagocytosis of Plasmodium falciparum–parasitized erythrocytes: a role for CD36 in malarial clearance

ID McGilvray, L Serghides, A Kapus… - Blood, The Journal …, 2000 - ashpublications.org
ID McGilvray, L Serghides, A Kapus, OD Rotstein, KC Kain
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2000ashpublications.org
Plasmodium falciparum is the most lethal form of malaria and is increasing both in incidence
and in its resistance to antimalarial agents. An improved understanding of the mechanisms
of malarial clearance may facilitate the development of new therapeutic interventions. We
postulated that the scavenger receptor CD36, an important factor in cytoadherence of P
falciparum–parasitized erythrocytes (PEs), might also play a role in monocyte-and
macrophage-mediated malarial clearance. Exposure of nonopsonized PEs to Fc receptor …
Abstract
Plasmodium falciparum is the most lethal form of malaria and is increasing both in incidence and in its resistance to antimalarial agents. An improved understanding of the mechanisms of malarial clearance may facilitate the development of new therapeutic interventions. We postulated that the scavenger receptor CD36, an important factor in cytoadherence of P falciparum–parasitized erythrocytes (PEs), might also play a role in monocyte- and macrophage-mediated malarial clearance. Exposure of nonopsonized PEs to Fc receptor–blocked monocytes resulted in significant PE phagocytosis, accompanied by intense clustering of CD36 around the PEs. Phagocytosis was blocked 60% to 70% by monocyte pretreatment with monoclonal anti-CD36 antibodies but not by antibodies to αvβ3, thrombospondin, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, or platelet/endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1. Antibody-induced CD36 cross-linking did result in the early increase of surface CD11b expression, but there was no increase in, or priming for, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α secretion following either CD36 cross-linking or PE phagocytosis. CD36 clustering does support intracellular signaling: Antibody-induced cross-linking initiated intracellular tyrosine phosphorylation as well as extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) phosphorylation. Both broad-spectrum tyrosine kinase inhibition (genistein) and selective ERK and p38 MAPK inhibition (PD98059 and SB203580, respectively) reduced PE uptake to almost the same extent as CD36 blockade. Thus, CD36-dependent binding and signaling appears to be crucial for the nonopsonic clearance of PEs and does not appear to contribute to the increase in TNF-α that is prognostic of poor outcome in clinical malaria.
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