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1.
Transmission of malaria parasites to mosquitoes is initiated by the obligatory sexual reproduction of the parasite within the mosquito bloodmeal. Differentiation of specialized transmission stages, the gametocytes, into male and female gametes is induced by a small mosquito molecule, xanthurenic acid (XA). Using a Plasmodium berghei strain expressing a bioluminescent calcium sensor, we show that XA triggers a rapid rise in cytosolic calcium specifically in gametocytes that is essential for their differentiation into gametes. A member of a family of plant-like calcium dependent protein kinases, CDPK4, is identified as the molecular switch that translates the XA-induced calcium signal into a cellular response by regulating cell cycle progression in the male gametocyte. CDPK4 is shown to be essential for the sexual reproduction and mosquito transmission of P. berghei. This study reveals an unexpected function for a plant-like signaling pathway in cell cycle regulation and life cycle progression of a malaria parasite.  相似文献   

2.
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Plasmodium falciparum gametocytes: still many secrets of a hidden life   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Sexual differentiation and parasite transmission are intimately linked in the life cycle of malaria parasites. The specialized cells providing this crucial link are the Plasmodium gametocytes. These are formed in the vertebrate host and are programmed to mature into gametes emerging from the erythrocytes in the midgut of a blood-feeding mosquito. The ensuing fusion into a zygote establishes parasite infection in the insect vector. Although key mechanisms of gametogenesis and fertilization are becoming progressively clear, the fundamental biology of gametocyte formation still presents open questions, some of which are specific to the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Developmental commitment to sexual differentiation, regulation of stage-specific gene expression, the profound molecular and cellular changes accompanying gametocyte specialization, the requirement for tissue-specific sequestration in P. falciparum gametocytogenesis are proposed here as areas for future investigation. The epidemiological relevance of parasite transmission from humans to mosquito in the spread of malaria and of Plasmodium drug resistance genes indicates that understanding molecular mechanisms of gametocyte formation is highly relevant to design strategies able to interfere with the transmission of this disease.  相似文献   

4.
To achieve transmission, a subpopulation of asexually dividing bloodstream forms of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum withdraws from the cell cycle to develop into gametocytes - cells specialized for sexual reproduction and invasion of the mosquito vector. For natural selection to maximize transmission to new hosts, a balance must have evolved between asexual replication and sexual differentiation. Here, Mike Dyer and Karen Day consider observations on the process of commitment to gametocytogenesis and use this information as the framework for a model that begins to explain the control of the dynamics between asexual and sexual development.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The molecular control of cell division and development in malaria parasites is far from understood. We previously showed that a Plasmodium gametocyte-specific NIMA-related protein kinase, nek-4, is required for completion of meiosis in the ookinete, the motile form that develops from the zygote in the mosquito vector. Here, we show that another NIMA-related kinase, Pfnek-2, is also predominantly expressed in gametocytes, and that Pfnek-2 is an active enzyme displaying an in vitro substrate preference distinct from that of Pfnek-4. A functional nek-2 gene is required for transmission of both Plasmodium falciparum and the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei to the mosquito vector, which is explained by the observation that disruption of the nek-2 gene in P. berghei causes dysregulation of DNA replication during meiosis and blocks ookinete development. This has implications (i) in our understanding of sexual development of malaria parasites and (ii) in the context of control strategies aimed at interfering with malaria transmission.Malaria, caused by infection with intracellular protozoan parasites of the genus Plasmodium, is a major public health problem in the developing world (1). The species responsible for the vast majority of lethal cases is Plasmodium falciparum. The life cycle of malaria parasites consists of a succession of developmental stages: asexual multiplication occurs in the human host (first in a single round of schizogony in a hepatocyte infected by a sporozoite injected by the mosquito vector, and then multiple rounds of schizogony in erythrocytes), whereas the sexual cycle is initiated by the formation of cell cycle-arrested gametocytes in infected erythrocytes and proceeds, in the midgut of the mosquito vector, to gametogenesis, fertilization, and formation of a motile ookinete. The ookinete crosses the midgut epithelium and establishes an oocyst at the basal lamina, in which sporogony occurs, generating sporozoites that render the vector infectious once they reach its salivary glands. The alternation of proliferative and non-proliferative phases implies that the control of cell cycle progression is of prime importance for completion of the life cycle of the parasite.The NIMA-related protein kinases (Neks)5 constitute an extended family of eukaryotic mitotic serine/threonine kinases. The best characterized members of the Nek family include NIMA (never in mitosis/Aspergillus), the founding member from the fungus Aspergillus nidulans (2), and its closest homologue in mammals, Nek2 (3, 4). Initially identified as a kinase essential for mitotic entry in Aspergillus, NIMA has been also shown to participate in nuclear membrane fission (5). Eleven members of the NIMA kinase family (Nek1–11) have now been identified in various human tissues, and together fulfill a number of cell cycle-related functions in centrosome separation, mitosis, meiosis, and checkpoint control (reviewed in Ref. 6). It has been proposed that expansion of the Nek family accompanied the evolution of a complex system for the coordination of progression through the cell cycle with the replication of cellular components such as cilia, basal bodies, and centrioles. Several human Neks have C-terminal extensions to their catalytic domain, which contain regulatory elements (e.g. PEST sequences that function as target for cell cycle-dependent proteolytic degradation, or coiled-coil domains mediating dimerization). Nek6 and Nek7 have no large extensions, but bind to the C-terminal non-catalytic tail of Nek9, an enzyme that becomes activated during mitosis and is likely to be responsible for the activation of Nek6 (7). This may represent a novel cascade of mitotic NIMA family protein kinases whose combined function is important for mitotic progression.The P. falciparum kinome includes four NIMA-related serine/threonine kinases (8). Pfnek-1 (PlasmoDB identifier PFL1370w) clusters within the Aspergillus NIMA/human Nek2 branch in phylogenetic trees, whereas clear orthology to mammalian or yeast Neks could not be assigned for the three other P. falciparum sequences (Pfnek-2, -3, and -4, PlasmoDB identifiers PFE1290w, PFL0080c, and MAL7P1.100, respectively) (9). Microarray data (10) available in the PlasmoDB data base (11) indicate that Pfnek-1 is expressed in asexual and sexual stages, whereas mRNA encoding the other three enzymes is predominantly or exclusively expressed in gametocytes, suggesting a possible role in the sexual development of the parasite. Consistent with this hypothesis, we previously showed that rodent malaria parasites Plasmodium berghei lacking the Nek-4 enzyme are unable to complete DNA replication to 4C in the zygote prior to meiosis (9). Pfnek-1, -3, and -4 have been characterized at the biochemical level and are active as recombinant enzymes (9, 12, 13). Pfnek-1 and Pfnek-3 have surprisingly been implicated as possible regulators of an atypical mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), as both enzymes synergize with the Pfmap-2 MAPK in vitro (12, 13); the physiological relevance of these observations remains to be demonstrated.Here, we demonstrate that Pfnek-2, like the other three members of the P. falciparum Nek family, is a bona fide protein kinase. Analysis of the expression pattern demonstrates that low levels of Pfnek-2 mRNA are actually detectable in asexual parasites, even though transgenic parasites expressing a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged Pfnek-2 under the control of its cognate promoter display female gametocyte-specific expression. To investigate the function of this kinase, parasite clones with a disrupted nek-2 gene were generated in P. falciparum and P. berghei; transmission experiments identified an important role for nek-2 in sexual development: nek-2 parasites are able to differentiate into mature gametocytes and to undergo gametogenesis, but do not develop into ookinetes. Further investigations on the pbnek-2 parasites showed that pre-meiotic DNA replication is dysregulated in the mutant clones.  相似文献   

7.
The human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum has an obligate sexual phase in its life cycle. Male and female gametes must mate in the mosquito midgut for transmission to occur. When mosquitoes ingest a mixture of two parasite clones, the inheritance of nuclear genes suggests that mating between gametes is random. Both cross-fertilization (between unlike male and female gametes) and selfing occur. However, it has been suggested that the inheritance of mitochondrial markers indicates non-random mating. An alternative hypothesis, which is presented here by Lisa Ranford-Cartwright, is that mating is random, but differences in the relative fitnesses of the gametocytes can explain the inheritance patterns observed.  相似文献   

8.
Gametocytes are the intraerythrocytic stages of malaria parasites that infect mosquitoes. When gametocytes of the chicken malaria parasite Plasmodium gallinaceum are ingested by a mosquito they become extracellular in the mosquito midgut, form gametes, and fertilize within 10 to 15 min after the insect has taken a blood meal. Gametocytes of P. gallinaceum were infectious when fed to Aedes aegypti mosquitoes in blood meals containing native serum from chickens or from the non-host species, man or sheep. Gametocytes stimulated to undergo gametogenesis and to fertilize in vitro were also infectious when fed to mosquitoes in native chicken serum. However, native serum from most non-host species, including sheep and man, suppressed the infectivity of newly fertilized zygotes to mosquitoes and lysed the zygotes in vitro. These effects were shown to be due to the activity of the alternative pathway of complement (APC) in the serum of the non-host species. After mild trypsin treatment, the zygotes of P. gallinaceum no longer infected mosquitoes in the presence of native chicken serum, although in heat-inactivated chicken serum their infectivity was normal. We conclude that trypsin-sensitive components on the zygotes surface protect them from destruction by the APC of their native host. The ability of gametocytes of P. gallinaceum to infect mosquitoes in the presence of native human serum is probably due to proteases that inactivate the APC of human serum before the gametes and zygotes emerge as extracellular parasites in the blood meal.  相似文献   

9.
Differentiation of malaria parasites into sexual forms (gametocytes) in the vertebrate host and their subsequent development into gametes in the mosquito vector are crucial steps in the completion of the parasite's life cycle and transmission of the disease. The molecular mechanisms that regulate the sexual cycle are poorly understood. Although several signal transduction pathways have been implicated, a clear understanding of the pathways involved has yet to emerge. Here, we show that a Plasmodium berghei homologue of Plasmodium falciparum mitogen-activated kinase-2 (Pfmap-2), a gametocyte-specific mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), is required for male gamete formation. Parasites lacking Pbmap-2 are competent for gametocytogenesis, but exflagellation of male gametocytes, the process that leads to male gamete formation, is almost entirely abolished in mutant parasites. Consistent with this result, transmission of mutant parasites to mosquitoes is grossly impaired. This finding identifies a crucial role for a MAPK pathway in malaria transmission.  相似文献   

10.
Malaria, which is caused by Plasmodium parasites, is transmitted by anopheline mosquitoes. When gametocytes, the precursor cells of Plasmodium gametes, are transferred to a mosquito, they fertilize and proliferate, which render the mosquito infectious to the next vertebrate host. Although the fertilization of malaria parasites has been considered as a rational target for transmission-blocking vaccines, the underlying mechanism is poorly understood. Here, we show that the rodent malaria parasite gene Plasmodium berghei GENERATIVE CELL SPECIFIC 1 (PbGCS1) plays a central role in its gametic interaction. PbGCS1 knockout parasites show male sterility, resulting in unsuccessful fertilization. Because such a male-specific function of GCS1 has been observed in angiosperms, this indicates, for the first time, that parasite sexual reproduction is controlled by a machinery common to flowering plants. Our present findings provide a new viewpoint for understanding the parasitic fertilization system and important clues for novel strategies to attack life-threatening parasites.  相似文献   

11.
Migration of the protozoan parasite Plasmodium through the mosquito is a complex and delicate process, the outcome of which determines the success of malaria transmission. The mosquito is not simply the vector of Plasmodium but, in terms of the life cycle, its definitive host: there, the parasite undergoes its sexual development, which results in colonization of the mosquito salivary glands. Two of the parasite's developmental stages in the mosquito, the ookinete and the sporozoite, are invasive and depend on gliding motility to access, penetrate and traverse their host cells. Recent advances in the field have included the identification of numerous Plasmodium molecules that are essential for parasite migration in the mosquito vector.  相似文献   

12.
SYNOPSIS. A new species of avian malaria parasite is described, for which the name Plasmodium formosanum is proposed. It was observed in the blood of Arboriphila crudigularis , the Formosan hill partridge; other bird species in which it may occur remain unknown, as do the mosquito vectors. It produces very broad, elongate gametocytes, the macrogametocyte usually exhibiting a very large vacuole. The usual number of merozoites is eight. The host cell nucleus typically is not displaced, except laterally by the sexual forms. Only the stages occurring in the blood have yet been seen.  相似文献   

13.
Plasmodium spp. undergo a complex obligate developmental cycle within their invertebrate vectors that enables transmission between vertebrate hosts. This developmental cycle involves sexual reproduction and then asexual multiplication, separated by phases of invasion and colonization of distinct vector tissues. As with other stages in the Plasmodium life cycle, there is exquisite adaptation of the malaria parasite to its changing environment as it transforms within the blood of its vertebrate host, through the different tissues of its mosquito vector and onwards to infect a new vertebrate host. Despite the intricacies inherent in these successive transformations, malaria parasites remain staggeringly successful at disseminating through their vertebrate host populations.  相似文献   

14.
Deciphering molecular interactions between the malaria parasite and its mosquito vector is an emerging area of research that will be greatly facilitated by the recent sequencing of the genomes of Anopheles gambiae mosquito and of various Plasmodium species. So far, most such studies have focused on Plasmodium berghei, a parasite species that infects rodents and is more amenable to studies. Here, we analysed the expression pattern of nine An.gambiae genes involved in immune surveillance during development of the human malaria parasite P.falciparum in mosquitoes fed on parasite-containing blood from patients in Cameroon. We found that P.falciparum ingestion triggers a midgut-associated, as well as a systemic, response in the mosquito, with three genes, NOS, defensin and GNBP, being regulated by ingestion of gametocytes, the infectious stage of the parasite. Surprisingly, we found a different pattern of expression of these genes in the An.gambiae-P.berghei model. Therefore, differences in mosquito reaction against various Plasmodium species may exist, which stresses the need to validate the main conclusions suggested by the P.berghei-An.gambiae model in the P.falciparum-An.gambiae system.  相似文献   

15.
Transmission of Plasmodium species from a mammalian host to the mosquito vector requires the uptake, during an infected blood meal, of gametocytes, the precursor cells of the gametes. Relatively little is known about the molecular mechanisms involved in the developmental switch from asexual development to sexual differentiation or the maturation and survival of gametocytes. Here, we show that a gene coding for a novel putative transporter, NPT1, plays a crucial role in the development of Plasmodium berghei gametocytes. Parasites lacking NPT1 are severely compromised in the production of gametocytes and the rare gametocytes produced are unable to differentiate into fertile gametes. This is the earliest block in gametocytogenesis obtained by reverse genetics and the first to demonstrate the role of a protein with a putative transport function in sexual development. These results and the high degree of conservation of NPT1 in Plasmodium species suggest that this protein could be an attractive target for the development of novel drugs to block the spread of malaria.  相似文献   

16.
The ability of malaria parasites to respond positively to the presence of feeding mosquito vectors would clearly be advantageous to transmission. In this study, Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes probed mice infected with the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium chabaudi. Growth of asexual stages was accelerated and gametocytes appeared 1-2 days earlier than in controls. This first study, to our knowledge, of the effects of mosquitoes on 'in-host' growth and development of Plasmodium has profound implications for malaria epidemiology, suggesting that individuals exposed to high mosquito numbers can contribute disproportionately high numbers of parasites to the transmission pool.  相似文献   

17.
Gametocyte maturation in Plasmodium falciparum is a critical step in the transmission of malaria. While the majority of parasites proliferate asexually in red blood cells, a small fraction of parasites undergo sexual conversion and mature over 2 weeks to become competent for transmission to a mosquito vector. Immature gametocytes sequester in deep tissues while mature stages must be able to circulate, pass the spleen and present themselves to the mosquito vector in order to complete transmission. Sequestration of asexual red blood cell stage parasites has been investigated in great detail. These studies have demonstrated that induction of cytoadherence properties through specific receptor-ligand interactions coincides with a significant increase in host cell stiffness. In contrast, the adherence and biophysical properties of gametocyte-infected red blood cells have not been studied systematically. Utilizing a transgenic line for 3D live imaging, in vitro capillary assays and 3D finite element whole cell modelling, we studied the role of cellular deformability in determining the circulatory characteristics of gametocytes. Our analysis shows that the red blood cell deformability of immature gametocytes displays an overall decrease followed by rapid restoration in mature gametocytes. Intriguingly, simulations suggest that along with deformability variations, the morphological changes of the parasite may play an important role in tissue distribution in vivo. Taken together, we present a model, which suggests that mature but not immature gametocytes circulate in the peripheral blood for uptake in the mosquito blood meal and transmission to another human host thus ensuring long-term survival of the parasite.  相似文献   

18.
Malaria pathology is caused by multiplication of asexual parasites within erythrocytes, whereas mosquito transmission of malaria is mediated by sexual precursor cells (gametocytes). Microarray analysis identified glycerol kinase (GK) as the second most highly upregulated gene in Plasmodium falciparum gametocytes with no expression detectable in asexual blood stage parasites. Phosphorylation of glycerol by GK is the rate-limiting step in glycerol utilization. Deletion of this gene from P. falciparum had no effect on asexual parasite growth, but surprisingly also had no effect on gametocyte development or exflagellation, suggesting that these life cycle stages do not utilize host-derived glycerol as a carbon source. Kinetic studies of purified PfGK showed that the enzyme is not regulated by fructose 1,6 bisphosphate. The high-resolution crystal structure of P. falciparum GK, the first of a eukaryotic GK, reveals two domains embracing a capacious ligand-binding groove. In the complexes of PfGK with glycerol and ADP, we observed closed and open forms of the active site respectively. The 27° domain opening is larger than in orthologous systems and exposes an extensive surface with potential for exploitation in selective inhibitor design should the enzyme prove to be essential in vivo either in the human or in the mosquito.  相似文献   

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Plasmodium sex determination and transmission to mosquitoes   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In order to be transmitted by their mosquito vector, malaria parasites undergo sexual reproduction, which occurs between specialized male and female parasites (gametes) within the blood meal in the mosquito. Nothing was known about how Plasmodium determines the sex of its gametocytes (gamete precursors), which are produced in the vertebrate host. Recently, erythropoietin, the vertebrate hormone controlling erythropoiesis in response to anaemia, was implicated in Plasmodium sex determination in animal models of malaria. This review examines the available information and addresses the relevance of such a sex determining mechanism for Plasmodium falciparum transmission to mosquitoes, with special reference to low gametocytaemias.  相似文献   

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