Adaptation of Plasmodium falciparum to its transmission environment
Department
Medicine
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Nature ecology & evolution
Abstract
Success in eliminating malaria will depend on whether parasite evolution outpaces control efforts. Here, we show that Plasmodium falciparum parasites (the deadliest of the species causing human malaria) found in low-transmission-intensity areas have evolved to invest more in transmission to new hosts (reproduction) and less in within-host replication (growth) than parasites found in high-transmission areas. At the cellular level, this adaptation manifests as increased production of reproductive forms (gametocytes) early in the infection at the expense of processes associated with multiplication inside red blood cells, especially membrane transport and protein trafficking. At the molecular level, this manifests as changes in the expression levels of genes encoding epigenetic and translational machinery. Specifically, expression levels of the gene encoding AP2-G-the transcription factor that initiates reproduction-increase as transmission intensity decreases. This is accompanied by downregulation and upregulation of genes encoding HDAC1 and HDA1-two histone deacetylases that epigenetically regulate the parasite's replicative and reproductive life-stage programmes, respectively. Parasites in reproductive mode show increased reliance on the prokaryotic translation machinery found inside the plastid-derived organelles. Thus, our dissection of the parasite's adaptive regulatory architecture has identified new potential molecular targets for malaria control.
First Page
377
Last Page
387
DOI
10.1038/s41559-017-0419-9
Volume
2
Issue
2
Publication Date
12-20-2017
PubMed ID
29255304
Recommended Citation
Rono, M. K., Nyonda, M. A., Simam, J. J., Ngoi, J. M., Mok, S., Kortok, M. M., Abdullah, A. S., Elfaki, M. M., Waitumbi, J. N., El-Hassan, I. M., Marsh, K., Bozdech, Z., & Mackinnon, M. J. (2017). Adaptation of Plasmodium falciparum to its transmission environment. Nature ecology & evolution, 2 (2), 377-387. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-017-0419-9