(Plasmodium Cysteine Repeat Modular Protein 4) is a specialized protein found in the Plasmodium genus, the parasites responsible for malaria. It belongs to a family of four conserved proteins (PCRMP1–4) that are critical for the parasite’s ability to transition between its mosquito vector and mammalian hosts. Biological Role and Function
: PCRMP4 is not required for the parasite's survival during the blood-stage of infection (the stage that causes symptoms in humans), but it is absolutely necessary for completing the complex life cycle through the mosquito. Research and Medical Context
: PCRMP4 is required for sporozoites (the infectious stage of the parasite) to exit the oocyst—a cyst-like structure on the mosquito's midgut wall.
: Although PCRMP4-deficient parasites are severely impaired in the liver, experiments have shown that immunization with these live, genetically-attenuated sporozoites does not induce a strong protective immune response compared to other attenuated strains.
Plasmodium Cysteine Repeat Modular Proteins 3 and 4 are ... - NCBI
: Research involving Plasmodium berghei (a rodent malaria model) showed that deleting the pcrmp4 gene resulted in parasites that could form normal oocysts but could not progress further in the transmission cycle.