Abstract

ABSTRACTPlasmodium falciparum, the Apicomplexan parasite that causes the most severe form of human malaria, divides via schizogony during the asexual blood stage of its life cycle. In this method of cell division, multiple daughter cells are generated from a single schizont by segmentation. During segmentation, the basal complex forms at the basal end of the nascent daughter parasites and likely facilitates cell shape and cytokinesis. The requirement and function for each of the individual protein components within the basal complex remain largely unknown in P. falciparum. In this work, we demonstrate that the P. falciparum membrane occupation and recognition nexus repeat-containing protein 1 (PfMORN1) is not required for asexual replication. Following inducible knockout of PfMORN1, we find no detectable defect in asexual parasite morphology or replicative fitness.IMPORTANCE Plasmodium falciparum parasites cause the most severe form of human malaria. During the clinically relevant blood stage of its life cycle, the parasites divide via schizogony. In this divergent method of cell division, the components for multiple daughter cells are generated within a common cytoplasm. At the end of schizogony, segmentation partitions the organelles into invasive daughter parasites. The basal complex is a ring-shaped molecular machine that is critical for segmentation. The requirement for individual proteins within the basal complex is incompletely understood. We demonstrate that the PfMORN1 protein is dispensable for blood stage replication of P. falciparum. This result highlights important differences between Plasmodium parasites and Toxoplasma gondii, where the ortholog T. gondii MORN1 (TgMORN1) is required for asexual replication.

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