AI Article Synopsis

  • All organisms must balance resource allocation between survival and reproduction, which is a challenge for malaria parasites that need to produce both asexual and sexual stages for their life cycle.
  • Recent research shows that Plasmodium chabaudi parasites can detect competing genotypes in their host and strategically reduce their investment in sexual stages to enhance their competitiveness.
  • These findings suggest that the limited production of transmission stages in malaria parasites is due to the need to prioritize in-host survival over reproductive investment, aligning with evolutionary theories about life-history trade-offs.

Article Abstract

All organisms must trade off resource allocation between different life processes that determine their survival and reproduction. Malaria parasites replicate asexually in the host but must produce sexual stages to transmit between hosts. Because different specialized stages are required for these functions, the division of resources between these life-history components is a key problem for natural selection to solve. Despite the medical and economic importance of these parasites, their reproductive strategies remain poorly understood and often seem counterintuitive. Here, we tested recent theory predicting that in-host competition shapes how parasites trade off investment in in-host replication relative to between-host transmission. We demonstrate, across several genotypes, that Plasmodium chabaudi parasites detect the presence of competing genotypes and facultatively respond by reducing their investment in sexual stages in the manner predicted to maximize their competitive ability. Furthermore, we show that genotypes adjust their allocation to sexual stages in line with the availability of exploitable red blood cell resources. Our findings are predicted by evolutionary theory developed to explain life-history trade-offs in more traditionally studied multicellular taxa and suggest that the answer to the long-standing question of why so few transmission stages are produced is that in most natural infections heavy investment in reproduction may compromise in-host survival.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3939351PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/658175DOI Listing

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