Set regulation in asexual and sexual Plasmodium parasites reveals a novel mechanism of stage‐specific expression
Summary Transmission of the malaria parasite depends on specialized gamete precursors (gametocytes) that develop in the bloodstream of a vertebrate host. Gametocyte/gamete differentiation requires controlled patterns of gene expression and regulation not only of stage and gender‐specific genes but a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular microbiology 2006-05, Vol.60 (4), p.870-882 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Summary
Transmission of the malaria parasite depends on specialized gamete precursors (gametocytes) that develop in the bloodstream of a vertebrate host. Gametocyte/gamete differentiation requires controlled patterns of gene expression and regulation not only of stage and gender‐specific genes but also of genes associated with DNA replication and mitosis. Once taken up by mosquito, male gametocytes undergo three mitotic cycles within few minutes to produce eight motile gametes. Here we analysed, in two Plasmodium species, the expression of SET, a conserved nuclear protein involved in chromatin dynamics. SET is expressed in both asexual and sexual blood stages but strongly accumulates in male gametocytes. We demonstrated functionally the presence of two distinct promoters upstream of the set open reading frame, the one active in all blood stage parasites while the other active only in gametocytes and in a fraction of schizonts possibly committed to sexual differentiation. In ookinetes both promoters exhibit a basal activity, while in the oocysts the gametocyte‐specific promoter is silent and the reporter gene is only transcribed from the constitutive promoter. This transcriptional control, described for the first time in Plasmodium, provides a mechanism by which single‐copy genes can be differently modulated during parasite development. In male gametocytes an overexpression of SET might contribute to a prompt entry and execution of S/M phases within mosquito vector. |
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ISSN: | 0950-382X 1365-2958 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2006.05141.x |