Plasmodium falciparum Sexual Commitment Rate Variation among Clinical Isolates and Diverse Laboratory-Adapted Lines
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Microbiology Spectrum
Abstract
Asexual blood-stage malaria parasites must produce sexual progeny to
infect mosquitoes. It is important to understand the scope and causes of intraspecific
variation in sexual commitment rates, particularly for the major human parasite P. falciparum. First, two alternative assay methods of measuring sexual commitment were compared to test a genetically modified P. falciparum line with elevated commitment rates
inducible by overexpression of GDV1. The methods yielded correlated measurements
with higher sensitivity and precision being achieved by one employing detection of the
early gametocyte differentiation marker Pfs16. Thus, this was used to survey a diverse
range of parasite lines and test each in multiple biological replicate assays in a serum free medium supplemented with Albumax. There were differences among six recent clinical isolates from Ghana in their mean rates of sexual commitment per cycle, ranging
from 3.3% to 12.2%. Among 13 diverse long-term laboratory-adapted lines, mean sexual
commitment rates for most ranged from 4.7% to 13.4%, a few had lower rates with
means from 0.3 to 1.6%, and one with a nonfunctional ap2-g gene always showed zero
commitment. Among a subset of lines tested for the effects of exogenous choline to
suppress commitment, there were significant differences. As expected, there was no
effect in a line that had lost the gdv1 gene and that had generally low commitment,
whereas the others showed quantitatively variable but significant responses to choline,
suggesting potential trait variation. The results indicated the value of performing multiple replicate assays for understanding the variation of this key reproductive trait that
likely affects transmission
Only sexual-stage malaria parasites are transmitted from human blood
to mosquitoes. Thus, it is vital to understand variations in sexual commitment rates
because these may be modifiable or susceptible to blocking. Two different methods
of commitment rate measurement were first compared, demonstrating higher sensitivity and precision by the detection of an early differentiation marker, which was
subsequently used to survey diverse lines. Clinical isolates from Ghana showed significant variation in mean per-cycle commitment rates and variation among biological replicates. Laboratory-adapted lines of diverse origins had a wider range with
most being within the range observed for the clinical isolates, while a minority consistently had lower or zero rates. There was quantitative variation in the effects
when adding choline to suppress commitment, indicating differing responsiveness of
parasites to this environmental modification. Performing multiple assay replicates
and comparisons of diverse isolates was important to understand this trait and its
potential effects on transmission
Description
Research Article