The malaria parasite relies on variant expression of members of multi-gene families as a strategy for environmental adaptation to promote parasite survival and pathogenesis. These genes are located in transcriptionally silenced DNA regions. A limited number of these genes escape gene silencing, and switching between them confers variant fitness on parasite progeny. Here, we show that PfSir2 histone deacetylases antagonize DNA-interacting acetylated alternative histones at the boundaries between active and silent DNA. This finding implicates acetylated alternative histones in the mechanism regulating variant gene silencing and thus malaria pathogenesis. This work also revealed that acetylation of alternative histones at promoters is dynamically associated with promoter activity across the genome, implicating acetylation of alternative histones in gene regulation genome wide. Understanding mechanisms of gene regulation in may aid in the development of new therapeutic strategies for malaria, which killed 619,000 people in 2021.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10746207PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02014-23DOI Listing

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