恶性疟原虫的进化轨迹:从自主光养到专用寄生虫。

IF 3.9 3区 工程技术 Q2 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Damian Pikor, Mikołaj Hurla, Alicja Drelichowska, Małgorzata Paul
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引用次数: 0

摘要

疟疾是人类宿主、疟蚊媒介和恶性疟原虫之间动态相互作用的产物,是共同进化复杂性的典范。在人类群体中,几个世纪的选择压力塑造了一个复杂而异质性的免疫遗传景观。经典的适应,如血红蛋白病,是由多种基因多态性来调节先天和适应性免疫反应的补充。这些遗传特征,以及反复接触后获得的功能性免疫,减轻了疾病的严重程度,但不断受到寄生虫高度进化的抗原变异和免疫调节机制的挑战。这样的宿主适应强调了一场进化军备竞赛,它永远影响着临床和流行病学结果。疟疾传播媒介已对自然和人为压力作出了强有力的反应。它们的载体能力受复杂的多基因性状控制,这些性状影响寄生虫发育过程中的生理屏障和免疫反应。最近的研究表明,这些蚊子表现出快速的行为和生化适应,包括寻找宿主行为的转变和杀虫剂抗性的进化。由于杀虫剂的广泛使用,出现了代谢解毒增强和靶部位不敏感等机制,从而削弱了驱虫蚊帐和室内残留喷洒等传统干预措施的效果。这些适应措施不仅在干预措施饱和的环境中维持传播动态,而且对目前的病媒控制模式构成挑战,需要制定创新的综合管理战略。在分子水平上,恶性疟原虫通过广泛的基因组流线型和代谢重组体现了进化的独创性。它紧凑的基因组,是战略性基因丢失和修剪的结果,是专性寄生生活方式的优化。顶质体的重要合成代谢功能,包括脂肪酸、类异戊二烯和血红素的生物合成,突出了寄生虫有效利用宿主来源营养物质的能力。此外,突变的快速积累,加上抗原转换和表观遗传调控的精心安排,不仅促进了免疫逃逸,而且加速了抗疟疾药物耐药性的出现。先进的高通量测序和功能基因组学已经开始阐明恶性疟原虫毒力基因表达和抗原多样性的代谢表观遗传联系。通过整合来自分子生物学、基因组学和进化生态学的见解,本研究描绘了使疟疾成为一种顽固的全球健康威胁的多方面的共同适应动力学。我们的研究结果为宿主-病原体媒介相互作用的核心分子军备竞赛提供了重要见解,并为开发旨在可持续消除疟疾的下一代治疗和媒介管理策略强调了有希望的途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Evolutionary Trajectory of <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i>: From Autonomous Phototroph to Dedicated Parasite.

Evolutionary Trajectory of <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i>: From Autonomous Phototroph to Dedicated Parasite.

Evolutionary Trajectory of Plasmodium falciparum: From Autonomous Phototroph to Dedicated Parasite.

Malaria persists as a paradigmatic model of co-evolutionary complexity, emerging from the dynamic interplay among a human host, Anopheles vectors, and Plasmodium falciparum parasites. In human populations, centuries of selective pressures have sculpted an intricate and heterogeneous immunogenetic landscape. Classical adaptations, such as hemoglobinopathies, are complemented by a diverse array of genetic polymorphisms that modulate innate and adaptive immune responses. These genetic traits, along with the acquisition of functional immunity following repeated exposures, mitigate disease severity but are continually challenged by the parasite's highly evolved mechanisms of antigenic variation and immunomodulation. Such host adaptations underscore an evolutionary arms race that perpetually shapes the clinical and epidemiological outcomes. Intermediaries in malaria transmission have evolved robust responses to both natural and anthropogenic pressures. Their vector competence is governed by complex polygenic traits that affect physiological barriers and immune responses during parasite development. Recent studies reveal that these mosquitoes exhibit rapid behavioral and biochemical adaptations, including shifts in host-seeking behavior and the evolution of insecticide resistance. Mechanisms such as enhanced metabolic detoxification and target site insensitivity have emerged in response to the widespread use of insecticides, thereby eroding the efficacy of conventional interventions like insecticide-treated bed nets and indoor residual spraying. These adaptations not only sustain transmission dynamics in intervention saturated landscapes but also challenge current vector control paradigms, necessitating the development of innovative, integrated management strategies. At the molecular level, P. falciparum exemplifies evolutionary ingenuity through extensive genomic streamlining and metabolic reconfiguration. Its compact genome, a result of strategic gene loss and pruning, is optimized for an obligate parasitic lifestyle. The repurposing of the apicoplast for critical anabolic functions including fatty acid, isoprenoid, and haem biosynthesis highlights the parasite's ability to exploit host derived nutrients efficiently. Moreover, the rapid accumulation of mutations, coupled with an elaborate repertoire for antigenic switching and epigenetic regulation, not only facilitates immune escape but also accelerates the emergence of antimalarial drug resistance. Advanced high throughput sequencing and functional genomics have begun to elucidate the metabolic epigenetic nexus that governs virulence gene expression and antigenic diversity in P. falciparum. By integrating insights from molecular biology, genomics, and evolutionary ecology, this study delineates the multifaceted co-adaptive dynamics that render malaria a recalcitrant global health threat. Our findings provide critical insights into the molecular arms race at the heart of host-pathogen vector interactions and underscore promising avenues for the development of next generation therapeutic and vector management strategies aimed at sustainable malaria elimination.

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来源期刊
Biomedicines
Biomedicines Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
8.50%
发文量
2823
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Biomedicines (ISSN 2227-9059; CODEN: BIOMID) is an international, scientific, open access journal on biomedicines published quarterly online by MDPI.
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