The endosymbiotic origins of the apicoplast link fever-survival and artemisinin-resistance in the malaria parasite

2020 
BackgroundThe emergence and spread of Plasmodium falciparum parasites resistant to front-line antimalarial artemisinin-combination therapies (ACT) threatens to erase the considerable gains against the disease of the last decade. We developed a new large-scale phenotypic screening pipeline and used it to carry out the first large-scale forward-genetic phenotype screen in P. falciparum to identify genes that allow parasites to survive febrile temperatures. ResultsScreening identified more than 200 P. falciparum mutants with differential responses to increased temperature. These mutants were more likely to be sensitive to artemisinin derivatives as well as to heightened oxidative stress. Major processes critical for P. falciparum tolerance to febrile temperatures and artemisinin included highly essential, conserved pathways associated with protein-folding, heat-shock and proteasome-mediated degradation, and unexpectedly, isoprenoid biosynthesis, which originated from the parasites algal endosymbiont-derived plastid, the apicoplast. Apicoplast-targeted genes in general were up-regulated in response to heat shock, as were other Plasmodium genes with orthologs in plant and algal genomes. ConclusionsPlasmodium falciparum parasites appear to exploit their innate febrile-response mechanisms to mediate resistance to artemisinin. Both responses depend on endosymbiotic cyanobacterium-related ancestral genes in the parasites genome, suggesting a link to the evolutionary origins of Plasmodium parasites in free-living ancestors.
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