Abstract

The heterochromatin environment plays a central role in silencing genes associated with the malaria parasite's development, survival in the host, and transmission to the mosquito vector. However, the underlying mechanism regulating the dynamic chromatin structure is not understood yet. Here, we have uncovered that Plasmodium falciparum Rrp6, an orthologue of eukaryotic RNA exosome-associated RNase, controls the silencing of heterochromatic genes. PfRrp6 knockdown disrupted the singular expression of the GC-rich ncRNA RUF6 family, a known critical regulator of virulence gene expression, through the stabilization of the nascent transcripts. Mechanistic investigation showed that the accumulation of the multiple RUF6 ncRNAs triggered local chromatin remodeling in situ, which activated their adjacent var genes. Strikingly, chromatin isolation by RNA purification analysis (ChIRP-seq) revealed that a remarkable RUF6 ncRNA had interacted with distal heterochromatin regions directly and stimulated a global derepression effect on heterochromatic genes, including all variant gene families and the sexual commitment-associated regulator ap2-g gene. Collectively, Rrp6 appears to conduct the epigenetic surveillance of heterochromatic gene expression through controlling RUF6 levels, thereby securing antigenic variation and sexual commitment of malaria parasites during the infection of the host.IMPORTANCE Malaria remains a major public health and economic burden. The heterochromatin environment controls the silencing of genes associated with the fate of malaria parasites. Previous studies have demonstrated that a group of GC-rich ncRNAs (RUF6) is associated with the mutually exclusive expression of var genes, but the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Here, through a series of genetic manipulation and genome-wide multiomics analysis, we have identified the plasmodial orthologue of RNA exosome-associated Rrp6 as an upstream regulator of RUF6 expression and revealed that the dysregulation of RUF6 upon Rrp6 knockdown triggered local chromatin alteration, thereby activating most heterochromatic genes via direct interaction of RUF6 and distal gene loci. This finding not only uncovered the in-depth mechanism of RUF6-mediated regulation of heterochromatic genes but also identified Rrp6 as a novel regulator of gene expression in human malaria parasites, which provides a new target for developing intervention strategies against malaria.

Highlights

  • The heterochromatin environment plays a central role in silencing genes associated with the malaria parasite’s development, survival in the host, and transmission to the mosquito vector

  • In the most severe form of malaria parasites, Plasmodium falciparum, the heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1)-mediated heterochromatic environment controls the transcriptional silencing of genes, such as clonally variant genes, invasion genes, and the ap2-g gene, which are involved in antigenic variation, red blood cell (RBC) invasion, and sexual commitment, respectively [6,7,8]

  • The highly ordered nuclear heterochromatin structure marked by HP1 and the histone modification H3K9me3 fulfilled the mutually exclusive expression of the var gene family by silencing most members by default, whereas the single active member located in the euchromatin microenvironment is marked by H3K9ac and H3K4me2/3 in a specialized zone at the nuclear periphery [6, 11,12,13]

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Summary

Introduction

The heterochromatin environment plays a central role in silencing genes associated with the malaria parasite’s development, survival in the host, and transmission to the mosquito vector. Through a series of genetic manipulation and genome-wide multiomics analysis, we have identified the plasmodial orthologue of RNA exosome-associated Rrp as an upstream regulator of RUF6 expression and revealed that the dysregulation of RUF6 upon Rrp knockdown triggered local chromatin alteration, thereby activating most heterochromatic genes via direct interaction of RUF6 and distal gene loci. This finding uncovered the indepth mechanism of RUF6-mediated regulation of heterochromatic genes and. As for the malaria parasites, it has been reported that the local chromatin alteration was linked to the activation of subtelomeric var genes [9, 15], but the underlying mechanisms of heterochromatin maintenance and local chromatin remodeling during expression switching are still elusive

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