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Clark, Martha

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Clark

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Martha

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Clark, Martha

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Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication

    Bone Marrow Is a Major Parasite Reservoir in Plasmodium vivax Infection

    (American Society for Microbiology, 2018) Obaldia, Nicanor; Meibalan, Elamaran; Sa, Juliana M.; Ma, Siyuan; Clark, Martha; Mejia, Pedro; Moraes Barros, Roberto R.; Otero, William; Ferreira, Marcelo U.; Mitchell, James; Milner, Danny; Huttenhower, Curtis; Wirth, Dyann; Duraisingh, Manoj; Wellems, Thomas E.; Marti, Matthias

    ABSTRACT Plasmodium vivax causes heavy burdens of disease across malarious regions worldwide. Mature P. vivax asexual and transmissive gametocyte stages occur in the blood circulation, and it is often assumed that accumulation/sequestration in tissues is not an important phase in their development. Here, we present a systematic study of P. vivax stage distributions in infected tissues of nonhuman primate (NHP) malaria models as well as in blood from human infections. In a comparative analysis of the transcriptomes of P. vivax and Plasmodium falciparum blood-stage parasites, we found a conserved cascade of stage-specific gene expression despite the greatly different gametocyte maturity times of these two species. Using this knowledge, we validated a set of conserved asexual- and gametocyte-stage markers both by quantitative real-time PCR and by antibody assays of peripheral blood samples from infected patients and NHP (Aotus sp.). Histological analyses of P. vivax parasites in organs of 13 infected NHP (Aotus and Saimiri species) demonstrated a major fraction of immature gametocytes in the parenchyma of the bone marrow, while asexual schizont forms were enriched to a somewhat lesser extent in this region of the bone marrow as well as in sinusoids of the liver. These findings suggest that the bone marrow is an important reservoir for gametocyte development and proliferation of malaria parasites.

  • Publication

    Lysophosphatidylcholine Regulates Sexual Stage Differentiation in the Human Malaria Parasite Plasmodium falciparum

    (Cell Press, 2017) Brancucci, Nicolas M.B.; Gerdt, Joseph; Wang, ChengQi; De Niz, Mariana; Philip, Nisha; Adapa, Swamy R.; Zhang, Min; Hitz, Eva; Niederwieser, Igor; Boltryk, Sylwia D.; Laffitte, Marie-Claude; Clark, Martha; Gruring, Christof; Ravel, Deepali; Blancke Soares, Alexandra; Demas, Allison; Bopp, Selina; Rubio-Ruiz, Belén; Conejo-Garcia, Ana; Wirth, Dyann; Gendaszewska-Darmach, Edyta; Duraisingh, Manoj; Adams, John H.; Voss, Till S.; Waters, Andrew P.; Jiang, Rays H.Y.; Clardy, Jon; Marti, Matthias

    Summary Transmission represents a population bottleneck in the Plasmodium life cycle and a key intervention target of ongoing efforts to eradicate malaria. Sexual differentiation is essential for this process, as only sexual parasites, called gametocytes, are infective to the mosquito vector. Gametocyte production rates vary depending on environmental conditions, but external stimuli remain obscure. Here, we show that the host-derived lipid lysophosphatidylcholine (LysoPC) controls P. falciparum cell fate by repressing parasite sexual differentiation. We demonstrate that exogenous LysoPC drives biosynthesis of the essential membrane component phosphatidylcholine. LysoPC restriction induces a compensatory response, linking parasite metabolism to the activation of sexual-stage-specific transcription and gametocyte formation. Our results reveal that malaria parasites can sense and process host-derived physiological signals to regulate differentiation. These data close a critical knowledge gap in parasite biology and introduce a major component of the sexual differentiation pathway in Plasmodium that may provide new approaches for blocking malaria transmission.