Abstract

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.

Highlights

  • Malaria remains a major challenge to global health with 40% of the world population at risk

  • Malaria pathology is caused by multiplication of asexual parasites within erythrocytes, whereas mosquito transmission of malaria is mediated by sexual precursor cells

  • PfGK mRNA expression is upregulated in sexual blood stage parasites

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Summary

Introduction

Malaria remains a major challenge to global health with 40% of the world population at risk. The disease is caused by the protozoan parasite Plasmodium, which is transmitted by the bite of a mosquito; the vast majority of deaths are due to infection with Plasmodium falciparum. When an infectious mosquito takes a human blood meal, sporozoites released from its salivary glands enter the bloodstream and invade liver cells. Thousands of merozoites are released which invade red blood cells where they replicate asexually and cause disease pathology. Motile zygotes (ookinetes) develop into oocysts that contain thousands of sporozoites, which migrate to the mosquito salivary glands. These are passed on to another individual when the mosquito takes its blood meal

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