Progeny counter mechanism in malaria parasites is linked to extracellular resources
Abstract
Malaria is caused by the rapid proliferation ofPlasmodiumparasites in patients and disease severity correlates with the number of infected red blood cells in circulation. Parasite multiplication within red blood cells is called schizogony and occurs through an atypical multinucleated cell division mode. The mechanisms regulating the number of daughter cells produced by a single progenitor are poorly understood. We investigated underlying regulatory principles by quantifying nuclear multiplication dynamics inPlasmodium falciparumandknowlesiusing super-resolution time-lapse microscopy. This revealed that the number of daughter cells was statistically independent of the duration of the nuclear division phase, which confirms that a counter mechanism, rather than a timer, regulates multiplication.P. falciparumcell volume at the start of nuclear division correlated with the final number of daughter cells. As schizogony progressed, the nucleocytoplasmic volume ratio, which has been found to be constant in all eukaryotes characterized so far, increased significantly, possibly to accommodate the exponentially multiplying nuclei. Depleting nutrients by dilution of culture medium caused parasites to produce less merozoites and reduced proliferation but did not affect cell volume or total nuclear volume at the end of schizogony. Our findings suggest that the counter mechanism implicated in malaria parasite proliferation integrates extracellular resource status to modify progeny number during blood stage infection.
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