4.7 Review

Plasmodium asexual growth and sexual development in the haematopoietic niche of the host

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages 177-189

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41579-019-0306-2

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Senior Investigator award
  2. European Research Council Consolidator award BoneMalar
  3. Wellcome Trust Centre award
  4. Royal Society Wolfson Merit award
  5. German Research Foundation postdoctoral fellowship

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Plasmodium falciparum and other malaria parasites have complex life cycles, inhabiting different host cells and tissues during their multistage development. In this Review, Marti and colleagues discuss blood-stage parasite development and the newly discovered reservoir in the haematopoietic niche. Plasmodium spp. parasites are the causative agents of malaria in humans and animals, and they are exceptionally diverse in their morphology and life cycles. They grow and develop in a wide range of host environments, both within blood-feeding mosquitoes, their definitive hosts, and in vertebrates, which are intermediate hosts. This diversity is testament to their exceptional adaptability and poses a major challenge for developing effective strategies to reduce the disease burden and transmission. Following one asexual amplification cycle in the liver, parasites reach high burdens by rounds of asexual replication within red blood cells. A few of these blood-stage parasites make a developmental switch into the sexual stage (or gametocyte), which is essential for transmission. The bone marrow, in particular the haematopoietic niche (in rodents, also the spleen), is a major site of parasite growth and sexual development. This Review focuses on our current understanding of blood-stage parasite development and vascular and tissue sequestration, which is responsible for disease symptoms and complications, and when involving the bone marrow, provides a niche for asexual replication and gametocyte development. Understanding these processes provides an opportunity for novel therapies and interventions.

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