Author:
Motta Francis C.,McGoff Kevin,Moseley Robert C.,Cho Chun-Yi,Kelliher Christina M.,Smith Lauren M.,Ortiz Michael S.,Leman Adam R.,Campione Sophia A.,Devos Nicolas,Chaorattanakawee Suwanna,Uthaimongkol Nichaphat,Kuntawunginn Worachet,Thongpiam Chadin,Thamnurak Chatchadaporn,Arsanok Montri,Wojnarski Mariusz,Vanchayangkul Pattaraporn,Boonyalai Nonlawat,Smith Philip L.,Spring Michele,Jongsakul Krisada,Chuang Ilin,Harer John,Haase Steven B.
Abstract
SummaryDuring infections with malaria parasites P. vivax, patients exhibit rhythmic fevers every 48 hours. These fever cycles correspond with the time parasites take to traverse the Intraerythrocytic Cycle (IEC) and may be guided by a parasite-intrinsic clock. Different species of Plasmodia have cycle times that are multiples of 24 hours, suggesting they may be coordinated with the host circadian clock. We utilized an ex vivo culture of whole blood from patients infected with P. vivax to examine the dynamics of the host circadian transcriptome and the parasite IEC transcriptome. Transcriptome dynamics revealed that the phases of the host circadian cycle and the parasite IEC were correlated across multiple patients, suggesting that the cycles are coupled. In mouse model systems, host-parasite cycle coupling appears to provide a selective advantage for the parasite. Thus, understanding how host and parasite cycles are coupled in humans could enable anti-malarial therapies that disrupt this coupling.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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