| Literature DB >> 34863371 |
Paolo Mesén-Ramírez1, Bärbel Bergmann1, Mourad Elhabiri2, Lei Zhu3, Heidrun von Thien4, Carolina Castro-Peña1, Tim-Wolf Gilberger4, Elisabeth Davioud-Charvet2, Zbynek Bozdech5, Anna Bachmann4, Tobias Spielmann6.
Abstract
Intraerythrocytic malaria parasites proliferate bounded by a parasitophorous vacuolar membrane (PVM). The PVM contains nutrient permeable channels (NPCs) conductive to small molecules, but their relevance for parasite growth for individual metabolites is largely untested. Here we show that growth-relevant levels of major carbon and energy sources pass through the NPCs. Moreover, we find that NPCs are a gate for several antimalarial drugs, highlighting their permeability properties as a critical factor for drug design. Looking into NPC-dependent amino acid transport, we find that amino acid shortage is a reason for the fitness cost in artemisinin-resistant (ARTR) parasites and provide evidence that NPC upregulation to increase amino acids acquisition is a mechanism of ARTR parasites in vitro and in human infections to compensate this fitness cost. Hence, the NPCs are important for nutrient and drug access and reveal amino acid deprivation as a critical constraint in ARTR parasites.Entities:
Keywords: EXP1; PVM; Plasmodium falciparum; amino acids; antimalaria drugs, Kelch13; artemisinin resistance; malaria; nutrient permeable channel; nutrients
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34863371 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2021.11.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 21.023