Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Imperial College of Science, Technology, and Medicine, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom,1 and
2. WHO Center for Tropical Diseases, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas 77555-06092
Abstract
ABSTRACT
During mosquito transmission, malaria ookinetes must cross a chitin-containing structure known as the peritrophic matrix (PM), which surrounds the infected blood meal in the mosquito midgut. In turn, ookinetes produce multiple chitinase activities presumably aimed at disrupting this physical barrier to allow ookinete invasion of the midgut epithelium.
Plasmodium
chitinase activities are demonstrated targets for human and avian malaria transmission blockade with the chitinase inhibitor allosamidin. Here, we identify and characterize the first chitinase gene of a rodent malaria parasite,
Plasmodium berghei
. We show that the gene, named
PbCHT1
, is a structural ortholog of
PgCHT1
of the avian malaria parasite
Plasmodium gallinaceum
and a paralog of
PfCHT1
of the human malaria parasite
Plasmodium falciparum
. Targeted disruption of
PbCHT1
reduced parasite infectivity in
Anopheles stephensi
mosquitoes by up to 90%. Reductions in infectivity were also observed in ookinete feeds—an artificial situation where midgut invasion occurs before PM formation—suggesting that PbCHT1 plays a role other than PM disruption. PbCHT1 null mutants had no residual ookinete-derived chitinase activity in vitro, suggesting that
P. berghei
ookinetes express only one chitinase gene. Moreover, PbCHT1 activity appeared insensitive to allosamidin inhibition, an observation that raises questions about the use of allosamidin and components like it as potential malaria transmission-blocking drugs. Taken together, these findings suggest a fundamental divergence among rodent, avian, and human malaria parasite chitinases, with implications for the evolution of
Plasmodium
-mosquito interactions.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
83 articles.
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