Rogerio Amino
Pasteur Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rogerio Amino.
Science | 2006
Angelika Sturm; Rogerio Amino; Claudia van de Sand; Tommy Regen; Silke Retzlaff; Annika Rennenberg; Andreas Krueger; Jörg-Matthias Pollok; Robert Ménard; Volker Heussler
The merozoite stage of the malaria parasite that infects erythrocytes and causes the symptoms of the disease is initially formed inside host hepatocytes. However, the mechanism by which hepatic merozoites reach blood vessels (sinusoids) in the liver and escape the host immune system before invading erythrocytes remains unknown. Here, we show that parasites induce the death and the detachment of their host hepatocytes, followed by the budding of parasite-filled vesicles (merosomes) into the sinusoid lumen. Parasites simultaneously inhibit the exposure of phosphatidylserine on the outer leaflet of host plasma membranes, which act as “eat me” signals to phagocytes. Thus, the hepatocyte-derived merosomes appear to ensure both the migration of parasites into the bloodstream and their protection from host immunity.
Cell Host & Microbe | 2008
Rogerio Amino; Donatella Giovannini; Sabine Thiberge; Pascale Gueirard; Bertrand Boisson; Jean-François Dubremetz; Marie-Christine Prévost; Tomoko Ishino; Masao Yuda; Robert Ménard
The malaria sporozoite, the parasite stage transmitted by the mosquito, is delivered into the dermis and differentiates in the liver. Motile sporozoites can invade host cells by disrupting their plasma membrane and migrating through them (termed cell traversal), or by forming a parasite-cell junction and settling inside an intracellular vacuole (termed cell infection). Traversal of liver cells, observed for sporozoites in vivo, is thought to activate the sporozoite for infection of a final hepatocyte. Here, using Plasmodium berghei, we show that cell traversal is important in the host dermis for preventing sporozoite destruction by phagocytes and arrest by nonphagocytic cells. We also show that cell infection is a pathway that is masked, rather than activated, by cell traversal. We propose that the cell traversal activity of the sporozoite must be turned on for progression to the liver parenchyma, where it must be switched off for infection of a final hepatocyte.
PLOS Medicine | 2011
Rogerio Amino; Quique Bassat; Jake Baum; Oliver Billker; Matthew Bogyo; Teun Bousema; G. K. Christophides; K. Deitsch; Rhoel R. Dinglasan; Abdoulaye Djimde; Manoj T. Duraisingh; F. Dzinjalamala; Christian T. Happi; Volker Heussler; J. Kramarik; T. de Koning-Ward; Marcus V. G. Lacerda; Miriam K. Laufer; P. Lim; Manuel Llinás; V. McGovern; Jesús Martínez-Barnetche; Maria M. Mota; Ivo Mueller; F. Okumu; Jason L. Rasgon; A. Serazin; P. K. Sharma; Robert E. Sinden; Dyann F. Wirth
The Malaria Eradication Research Agenda (malERA) consultative group on Basic Science and Enabling Technologies present a research and development agenda for basic research required for malaria eradication.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Pascale Gueirard; Joana Tavares; Sabine Thiberge; Florence Bernex; Tomoko Ishino; Geneviève Milon; Blandine Franke-Fayard; Chris J. Janse; Robert Ménard; Rogerio Amino
The first step of Plasmodium development in vertebrates is the transformation of the sporozoite, the parasite stage injected by the mosquito in the skin, into merozoites, the stage that invades erythrocytes and initiates the disease. The current view is that, in mammals, this stage conversion occurs only inside hepatocytes. Here, we document the transformation of sporozoites of rodent-infecting Plasmodium into merozoites in the skin of mice. After mosquito bite, ∼50% of the parasites remain in the skin, and at 24 h ∼10% are developing in the epidermis and the dermis, as well as in the immunoprivileged hair follicles where they can survive for weeks. The parasite developmental pathway in skin cells, although frequently abortive, leads to the generation of merozoites that are infective to erythrocytes and are released via merosomes, as typically observed in the liver. Therefore, during malaria in rodents, the skin is not just the route to the liver but is also the final destination for many inoculated parasites, where they can differentiate into merozoites and possibly persist.
Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2013
Robert Ménard; Joana Tavares; Ian A. Cockburn; Miles B. Markus; Fidel Zavala; Rogerio Amino
Malaria, which is caused by Plasmodium spp., starts with an asymptomatic phase, during which sporozoites, the parasite form that is injected into the skin by a mosquito, develop into merozoites, the form that infects erythrocytes. This pre-erythrocytic phase is still the most enigmatic in the parasite life cycle, but has long been recognized as an attractive vaccination target. In this Review, we present what has been learned in recent years about the natural history of the pre-erythrocytic stages, mainly using intravital imaging in rodents. We also consider how this new knowledge is in turn changing our understanding of the immune response mounted by the host against the pre-erythrocytic forms.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013
Joana Tavares; Pauline Formaglio; Sabine Thiberge; Elodie Mordelet; Nico van Rooijen; Alexander Medvinsky; Robert Ménard; Rogerio Amino
Malaria sporozoites cross the liver sinusoidal barrier, target Kupffer cells and endothelial cells with cell traversal inhibiting sporozoite clearance.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Ian A. Cockburn; Rogerio Amino; Reka K. Kelemen; Scot C. Kuo; Sze Wah Tse; Andrea J. Radtke; Laura Mac-Daniel; Vitaly V. Ganusov; Fidel Zavala; Robert Ménard
CD8+ T cells are specialized cells of the adaptive immune system capable of finding and eliminating pathogen-infected cells. To date it has not been possible to observe the destruction of any pathogen by CD8+ T cells in vivo. Here we demonstrate a technique for imaging the killing of liver-stage malaria parasites by CD8+ T cells bearing a transgenic T cell receptor specific for a parasite epitope. We report several features that have not been described by in vitro analysis of the process, chiefly the formation of large clusters of effector CD8+ T cells around infected hepatocytes. The formation of clusters requires antigen-specific CD8+ T cells and signaling by G protein-coupled receptors, although CD8+ T cells of unrelated specificity are also recruited to clusters. By combining mathematical modeling and data analysis, we suggest that formation of clusters is mainly driven by enhanced recruitment of T cells into larger clusters. We further show various death phenotypes of the parasite, which typically follow prolonged interactions between infected hepatocytes and CD8+ T cells. These findings stress the need for intravital imaging for dissecting the fine mechanisms of pathogen recognition and killing by CD8+ T cells.
Cellular Microbiology | 2014
Allison F. Carey; Mirko Singer; Daniel Y. Bargieri; Sabine Thiberge; Friedrich Frischknecht; Robert Ménard; Rogerio Amino
Calcium is a key signalling molecule in apicomplexan parasites and plays an important role in diverse processes including gliding motility. Gliding is essential for the malaria parasite to migrate from the skin to the liver as well as to invade host tissues and cells. Here we investigated the dynamics of intracellular Ca2+ in the motility of Plasmodium berghei sporozoites by live imaging and flow cytometry. We found that cytosolic levels of Ca2+ increase when sporozoites are activated in suspension, which is sufficient to induce the secretion of integrin‐like adhesins that are essential for gliding motility. By increasing intracellular Ca2+ levels artificially with an ionophore, these adhesins are secreted onto the sporozoite surface, however, the parasite is not capable of gliding. A second level of Ca2+ modulation was observed during attachment to and detachment from a solid substrate, leading to a further increase or a decrease in the cytoplasmic levels of Ca2+ respectively. We also observed oscillations in the intracellular Ca2+ level during gliding. Finally, an intracellular Ca2+ chelator, an inhibitor of phosphoinositide‐specific phospholipase C (PI‐PLC), and an inhibitor of the inositol triphosphate (IP3) receptor blocked the rise in intracellular Ca2+, adhesin secretion, and motility of activated sporozoites, indicating that intracellular stores supply Ca2+ during sporozoite gliding. Our study indicates that a rise in intracellular Ca2+ is necessary but not sufficient to activate gliding, that Ca2+ levels are modulated in several ways during motility, and that a PI‐PLC/IP3 pathway regulates Ca2+ release during the process of sporozoite locomotion.
Trends in Parasitology | 2015
Ross G. Douglas; Rogerio Amino; Photini Sinnis; Freddy Frischknecht
Malaria parasites undergo a complex life cycle between their hosts and vectors. During this cycle the parasites invade different types of cells, migrate across barriers, and transfer from one host to another. Recent literature hints at a misunderstanding of the difference between active, parasite-driven migration and passive, circulation-driven movement of the parasite or parasite-infected cells in the various bodily fluids of mosquito and mammalian hosts. Because both active migration and passive transport could be targeted in different ways to interfere with the parasite, a distinction between the two ways the parasite uses to get from one location to another is essential. We discuss the two types of motion needed for parasite dissemination and elaborate on how they could be targeted by future vaccines or drugs.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2015
Paulo Fp Pimenta; Alessandra da Silva Orfanó; Ana C. Bahia; Ana Pm Duarte; Claudia M Ríos-Velásquez; Fabrício Freire de Melo; Felipe Ac Pessoa; Giselle A Oliveira; Keillen Mm Campos; Luis Villegas; Nilton Barnabé Rodrigues; Rafael Nacif-Pimenta; Rejane C Simões; Wuelton Marcelo Monteiro; Rogerio Amino; Yara M. Traub-Cseko; José B. P. Lima; Maria Gv Barbosa; Marcus Vg Lacerda; Wanderli Pedro Tadei; Nágila Fc Secundino
In the Americas, areas with a high risk of malaria transmission are mainly located in the Amazon Forest, which extends across nine countries. One keystone step to understanding the Plasmodium life cycle in Anopheles species from the Amazon Region is to obtain experimentally infected mosquito vectors. Several attempts to colonise Ano- pheles species have been conducted, but with only short-lived success or no success at all. In this review, we review the literature on malaria transmission from the perspective of its Amazon vectors. Currently, it is possible to develop experimental Plasmodium vivax infection of the colonised and field-captured vectors in laboratories located close to Amazonian endemic areas. We are also reviewing studies related to the immune response to P. vivax infection of Anopheles aquasalis, a coastal mosquito species. Finally, we discuss the importance of the modulation of Plasmodium infection by the vector microbiota and also consider the anopheline genomes. The establishment of experimental mosquito infections with Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium yoelii and Plasmodium berghei parasites that could provide interesting models for studying malaria in the Amazonian scenario is important. Understanding the molecular mechanisms involved in the development of the parasites in New World vectors is crucial in order to better determine the interaction process and vectorial competence.