Type II fatty acid synthesis is essential only for malaria parasite late liver stage development

Ashley M. Vaughan(Center for Infectious Disease Research), Matthew T. O’Neill(Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research), Alice S. Tarun(Center for Infectious Disease Research), Nelly Camargo(Center for Infectious Disease Research), Thuan Phuong(Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research), Ahmed S. I. Aly(Center for Infectious Disease Research), Alan F. Cowman(Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research), Stefan H. I. Kappe(Center for Infectious Disease Research)
Cellular Microbiology
December 3, 2008
Cited by 410Open Access
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Abstract

Intracellular malaria parasites require lipids for growth and replication. They possess a prokaryotic type II fatty acid synthesis (FAS II) pathway that localizes to the apicoplast plastid organelle and is assumed to be necessary for pathogenic blood stage replication. However, the importance of FAS II throughout the complex parasite life cycle remains unknown. We show in a rodent malaria model that FAS II enzymes localize to the sporozoite and liver stage apicoplast. Targeted deletion of FabB/F, a critical enzyme in fatty acid synthesis, did not affect parasite blood stage replication, mosquito stage development and initial infection in the liver. This was confirmed by knockout of FabZ, another critical FAS II enzyme. However, FAS II-deficient Plasmodium yoelii liver stages failed to form exo-erythrocytic merozoites, the invasive stage that first initiates blood stage infection. Furthermore, deletion of FabI in the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum did not show a reduction in asexual blood stage replication in vitro. Malaria parasites therefore depend on the intrinsic FAS II pathway only at one specific life cycle transition point, from liver to blood.


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