Publication | Open Access
Regulators of male and female sexual development critical for transmission of a malaria parasite
11
Citations
82
References
2021
Year
Unknown Venue
SpermatogenesisFertilityGeneticsMalariaGenomic MechanismGynecologyFemale Reproductive SystemMolecular GeneticsFemale Reproductive FunctionGenomicsReproductive BiologyTen GenesParasite GenomicsMalaria ParasiteDevelopmental SwitchPublic HealthParasitologySexual And Reproductive HealthHost-parasite RelationshipDevelopmental GeneticsTranscription Factor Ap2-gVector-parasite RelationshipGenetic VariationBiologyFemale Sexual DevelopmentEvolutionary BiologyParasite ControlMedicine
Summary The transmission of malaria parasites from vertebrate host to mosquito vector requires a developmental switch in asexually dividing blood-stage parasites to sexual reproduction. In Plasmodium berghei the transcription factor AP2-G is required and sufficient for this switch, but how a particular sex is determined in a haploid parasite remains unknown. Using a global screen of barcoded mutants, we here identify ten genes essential for the formation of either male or female sexual forms and validate their importance for transmission. High-resolution single-cell transcriptomics of wild-type and mutant parasites portrays the developmental bifurcation and reveals a regulatory cascade of putative gene functions in determination and subsequent differentiation of each sex. A male-determining gene with a LOTUS/OST-HTH domain points towards unexpected conservation of molecular mechanisms of gametogenesis in animals and a distantly related eukaryotic parasite.
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