Author:
van Schaijk Ben C. L.,Kumar T. R. Santha,Vos Martijn W.,Richman Adam,van Gemert Geert-Jan,Li Tao,Eappen Abraham G.,Williamson Kim C.,Morahan Belinda J.,Fishbaugher Matt,Kennedy Mark,Camargo Nelly,Khan Shahid M.,Janse Chris J.,Sim Kim Lee,Hoffman Stephen L.,Kappe Stefan H. I.,Sauerwein Robert W.,Fidock David A.,Vaughan Ashley M.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The prodigious rate at which malaria parasites proliferate during asexual blood-stage replication, midgut sporozoite production, and intrahepatic development creates a substantial requirement for essential nutrients, including fatty acids that likely are necessary for parasite membrane formation.
Plasmodium
parasites obtain fatty acids either by scavenging from the vertebrate host and mosquito vector or by producing fatty acids
de novo
via the type two fatty acid biosynthesis pathway (FAS-II). Here, we study the FAS-II pathway in
Plasmodium falciparum
, the species responsible for the most lethal form of human malaria. Using antibodies, we find that the FAS-II enzyme FabI is expressed in mosquito midgut oocysts and sporozoites as well as liver-stage parasites but not during the blood stages. As expected, FabI colocalizes with the apicoplast-targeted acyl carrier protein, indicating that FabI functions in the apicoplast. We further analyze the FAS-II pathway in
Plasmodium falciparum
by assessing the functional consequences of deleting
fabI
and
fabB/F
. Targeted deletion or disruption of these genes in
P. falciparum
did not affect asexual blood-stage replication or the generation of midgut oocysts; however, subsequent sporozoite development was abolished. We conclude that the
P. falciparum
FAS-II pathway is essential for sporozoite development within the midgut oocyst. These findings reveal an important distinction from the rodent
Plasmodium
parasites
P. berghei
and
P. yoelii
, where the FAS-II pathway is known to be required for normal parasite progression through the liver stage but is not required for oocyst development in the
Anopheles
mosquito midgut.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
121 articles.
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