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Division and Transmission: Malaria Parasite Development in the Mosquito

journal contribution
posted on 2022-12-05, 11:48 authored by DS Guttery, M Zeeshan, DJP Ferguson, AA Holder, R Tewari
The malaria parasite life cycle alternates between two hosts: a vertebrate and the female Anopheles mosquito vector. Cell division, proliferation, and invasion are essential for parasite development, transmission, and survival. Most research has focused on Plasmodium development in the vertebrate, which causes disease; however, knowledge of malaria parasite development in the mosquito (the sexual and transmission stages) is now rapidly accumulating, gathered largely through investigation of the rodent malaria model, with Plasmodium berghei. In this review, we discuss the seminal genome-wide screens that have uncovered key regulators of cell proliferation, invasion, and transmission during Plasmodium sexual development. Our focus is on the roles of transcription factors, reversible protein phosphorylation, and molecular motors. We also emphasize the still-unanswered important questions around key pathways in cell division during the vector transmission stages and how they may be targeted in future studies.

History

Author affiliation

Leicester Cancer Research Centre, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Annual review of microbiology

Volume

76

Issue

1

Pagination

113 - 134

Publisher

Annual Reviews

issn

0066-4227

eissn

1545-3251

Copyright date

2022

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

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