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Why Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum are so different? A tale of two clades and their species diversities

Journal

MALARIA JOURNAL
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12936-022-04130-9

Keywords

Chitinases; Laverania; Malaria; Merozoite surface protein; Molecular clock; Phylogenomics; Plasmodium phylogeny; PfRH5-PfCyRPA-PfRipr complex

Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health [U19 AI089681, R01AI130473]

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This study discusses the species diversity, phenotypic differences, molecular adaptations, and host-parasite biocenosis of malaria parasites in primates. It finds that malaria parasites can be divided into two subgenera, with Laverania containing the species including Plasmodium falciparum, and Plasmodium involving other species in Southeast Asia. Evaluating the origin of molecular traits in primate malaria clades has potential implications for interventions.
The global malaria burden sometimes obscures that the genus Plasmodium comprises diverse clades with lineages that independently gave origin to the extant human parasites. Indeed, the differences between the human malaria parasites were highlighted in the classical taxonomy by dividing them into two subgenera, the subgenus Plasmodium, which included all the human parasites but Plasmodium falciparum that was placed in its separate subgenus, Laverania. Here, the evolution of Plasmodium in primates will be discussed in terms of their species diversity and some of their distinct phenotypes, putative molecular adaptations, and host-parasite biocenosis. Thus, in addition to a current phylogeny using genome-level data, some specific molecular features will be discussed as examples of how these parasites have diverged. The two subgenera of malaria parasites found in primates, Plasmodium and Laverania, reflect extant monophyletic groups that originated in Africa. However, the subgenus Plasmodium involves species in Southeast Asia that were likely the result of adaptive radiation. Such events led to the Plasmodium vivax lineage. Although the Laverania species, including P. falciparum, has been considered to share avian characteristics, molecular traits that were likely in the common ancestor of primate and avian parasites are sometimes kept in the Plasmodium subgenus while being lost in Laverania. Assessing how molecular traits in the primate malaria clades originated is a fundamental science problem that will likely provide new targets for interventions. However, given that the genus Plasmodium is paraphyletic (some descendant groups are in other genera), understanding the evolution of malaria parasites will benefit from studying non-Plasmodium Haemosporida.

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