Publication:
Plasmodium yoelii Vitamin B-5 Pantothenate Transporter Candidate is Essential for Parasite Transmission to the Mosquito

No Thumbnail Available
Date
2014-07-11T00:00:00Z
Authors
Hart, Robert J.
Lawres, Lauren
Fritzen, Emma
Ben Mamoun, Choukri
Aly, Ahmed Sayed Ibrahım
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue

Metrics

Search on Google Scholar

Abstract
In nearly all non-photosynthetic cells, pantothenate (vitamin B-5) transport and utilization are prerequisites for the synthesis of the universal essential cofactor Coenzyme A (CoA). Early studies showed that human malaria parasites rely on the uptake of pantothenate across the parasite plasma membrane for survival within erythrocytes. Recently, a P. falciparum candidate pantothenate transporter (PAT) was characterized by functional complementation in yeast. These studies revealed that PfPAT mediated survival of yeast cells in low pantothenate concentrations and restored sensitivity of yeast cells lacking pantothenate uptake to fenpropimorph. In addition, PfPAT was refractory to deletion in P. falciparum in vitro, but nothing is known about the in vivo functions of PAT in Plasmodium life cycle stages. Herein, we used gene-targeting techniques to delete PAT in Plasmodium yoelii. Parasites lacking PAT displayed normal asexual and sexual blood stage development compared to wild-type (WT) and WT-like p230p(-) parasites. However, progression from the ookinete to the oocyst stage and sporozoite formation were completely abolished in pat(-) parasites. These studies provide the first evidence for an essential role of a candidate pantothenate transport in malaria transmission to Anopheles mosquitoes. This will set the stage for the development of PAT inhibitors against multiple parasite life cycle stages.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Hart R. J. , Lawres L., Fritzen E., Ben Mamoun C., Aly A. S. I. , -Plasmodium yoelii Vitamin B-5 Pantothenate Transporter Candidate is Essential for Parasite Transmission to the Mosquito-, SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, cilt.4, 2014
Collections
Page Views

0

File Downloads

0

Sustainable Development Goals