AI Article Synopsis

  • Malaria-causing parasite Plasmodium falciparum uses signals from the body's immune response to decide when to change its behavior.
  • High levels of a chemical called CXCL10 are found in severe cases of malaria but lower in patients who recover without issues.
  • When CXCL10 levels are high, the parasite speeds up its growth, and if it can’t keep CXCL10 low, it changes its strategy to survive better in the host.

Article Abstract

Pathogens are thought to use host molecular cues to control when to initiate life-cycle transitions, but these signals are mostly unknown, particularly for the parasitic disease malaria caused by Plasmodium falciparum. The chemokine CXCL10 is present at high levels in fatal cases of cerebral malaria patients, but is reduced in patients who survive and do not have complications. Here we show a Pf 'decision-sensing-system' controlled by CXCL10 concentration. High CXCL10 expression prompts P. falciparum to initiate a survival strategy via growth acceleration. Remarkably, P. falciparum inhibits CXCL10 synthesis in monocytes by disrupting the association of host ribosomes with CXCL10 transcripts. The underlying inhibition cascade involves RNA cargo delivery into monocytes that triggers RIG-I, which leads to HUR1 binding to an AU-rich domain of the CXCL10 3'UTR. These data indicate that when the parasite can no longer keep CXCL10 at low levels, it can exploit the chemokine as a cue to shift tactics and escape.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8357946PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24997-7DOI Listing

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