The Origins of Malaria: There Are More Things in Heaven and Earth

The Origins of Malaria: There Are More Things in Heaven and Earth

SUPPLEMENT ARTICLE S16 The origins of malaria: there are more things in heaven and earth ... P. J. KEELING1 and J. C. RAYNER2* 1 Department of Botany, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Evolutionary Biology Program, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada 2 Malaria Programme, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge CB10 1SA, UK (Received 9 December 2013; revised 14 April 2014; accepted 15 April 2014; first published online 25 June 2014) SUMMARY Malaria remains one of the most significant global public health burdens, with nearly half of the world’s population at risk of infection. Malaria is not however a monolithic disease – it can be caused by multiple different parasite species of the Plasmodium genus, each of which can induce different symptoms and pathology, and which pose quite different challenges for control. Furthermore, malaria is in no way restricted to humans. There are Plasmodium species that have adapted to infect most warm-blooded vertebrate species, and the genus as a whole is both highly successful and highly diverse. How, where and when human malaria parasites originated from within this diversity has long been a subject of fascination and sometimes also controversy. The past decade has seen the publication of a number of important discoveries about malaria parasite origins, all based on the application of molecular diagnostic tools to new sources of samples. This review summarizes some of those recent discoveries and discusses their implication for our current understanding of the origin and evolution of the Plasmodium genus. The nature of these discoveries and the manner in which they are made are then used to lay out a series of opportunities and challenges for the next wave of parasite hunters. Key words: Apicomplexa, Plasmodium, evolution, origin, phylogeny. A NEW AGE OF PARASITE DISCOVERY presentations to this day. At the same time, ultra- structure and molecular phylogeny combined to give Scientists in general, and perhaps parasitologists us an equally well-defined view of the broader place in particular, have always been driven by a need to of Plasmodium in the tree of life, and amongst its close define the landscape in which they work. Almost as relatives in the phylum Apicomplexa. soon as Charles Laveran first glimpsed the wink of a In the past 5 years, however, the clear and hemozoin crystal down his microscope there was a definitive worldview described in these textbooks rush to categorize these strange new organisms – to has been radically overhauled by successive waves give labels to the phases of their extraordinarily of new discoveries, powered by a combination of complex life cycle, and to group them into species. molecular diagnostic technologies and extensive After a period of occasionally fractious dispute, with sampling efforts. Some of these searches involve the distinction between Plasmodium vivax and painstaking observations of blood smears from wild- Plasmodium ovale proving the most difficult to caught animals and would be instantly recognizable resolve, by 1922 the four major human Plasmodium to the original Plasmodium pioneers. Others would species had been defined and named. Discovery of appear completely alien, involving ape faeces col- new Plasmodium species in other hosts continued for lected off forest floors in West Africa and massive some time, with a particularly golden era of discovery molecular surveys of the world’s greatest coral reef in Asian monkeys in the early 1960s. However by the ecosystems. Together these studies have forced a late 1960s some of the world’s most eminent re-evaluation of the origin of the most deadly human malariologists felt that they had a secure enough malaria species, Plasmodium falciparum, the source of grip on the Plasmodium genus that they could define the rodent malaria parasite species and even the very it in elegant and definitive textbooks (Garnham, origins of the phylum Apicomplexa itself. 1966; Coatney et al. 1971), complete with the beautifully detailed illustrations of each species that are still widely used in teaching and research UNEXPECTED ROLES FOR CORAL AND PHOTOSYNTHESIS IN APICOMPLEXAN * Corresponding author: Malaria Programme, Wellcome EVOLUTION Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge CB10 1SA, UK. E-mail: julian. Tracing the evolutionary history from Plasmodium [email protected] back through its apicomplexan relatives and beyond, Parasitology (2015), 142, S16–S25. © Cambridge University Press 2014. The online version of this article is published within an Open Access environment subject to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution licence http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ doi:10.1017/S0031182014000766 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 170.106.33.14, on 28 Sep 2021 at 15:44:47, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182014000766 Apicomplexan parasite origins S17 there was a point at which the parasitic lifestyle that unidentified coral parasite known as Genotype N has characterizes the entire apicomplexan lineage origi- been investigated at all), but these new data suggest nated. Finding this point in time and explaining something much more – that coral may be the cradle how and why this massive transition took place have of apicomplexan origins (Toller et al. 2002). It is long been difficult questions. Over a decade ago the possible that the association between the ancestor of answers took an unexpected turn with the discovery apicomplexans and animals began as a mutually that Plasmodium and other apicomplexans contained beneficial one based on photosynthesis with an a plastid (generally called the ‘apicoplast’; McFadden ancient and likely now extinct lineage of corals, et al. 1996; Wilson et al. 1996; Kohler et al. 1997), an similar to the association between modern corals and organelle usually used by plants and algae for zooxanthellae. Later this association soured and photosynthesis. So the question became more pre- became one-sided, perhaps when the lineage leading cise, but stranger: how did a presumably photosyn- to apicomplexans lost photosynthesis but retained thetic ancestor turn into an obligate intracellular their ability to invade coral cells. This would tip the parasite of animals? Recently, thanks to some good balance to an association more like the parasitic ones old-fashioned organism hunting, these two questions we see today. This story sounds appealing, and may are merging into a new way to look at the deep origins even be partly true, but the truth is almost certainly of apicomplexans. more complex. For a start, another lineage is known Critical to this new understanding was the dis- to branch at the base of apicomplexans, and its covery of living descendants of a recent ancestor members are neither parasitic nor photosynthetic. of the apicomplexans – in effect photosynthetic Instead, the colpodellids are free-living heterotrophs members of the apicomplexan lineage (Moore et al. that seem to specialize in attacking and eating other 2008). Chromera and Vitrella are two new genera of eukaryotes using a feeding apparatus homologous to fully photosynthetic algae that were isolated from the apical complex (Kuvardina et al. 2002; Leander coral reefs, and branch near the base of the phylum and Keeling, 2003). The exact relationship between Apicomplexa in molecular phylogenetic trees (Moore colpodellids, Chromera, Vitrella and apicomplexans et al. 2008; Janouskovec et al. 2010)(Fig. 1). The remains unclear, so it is too early to make firm plastid genomes of both have been fully sequenced, conclusions about which, if either, kind of lineage and demonstrated that apicomplexan plastids are made the transition to obligate parasitism. However, derived from the same red algal endosymbiont the nearly perfect correlation between the photo- that also gave rise to plastids of dinoflagellate and synthetic members of the lineage and corals gives stramenopile algae (Janouskovec et al. 2010). The us a number of new intriguing leads to follow Chromera and Vitrella plastid sequence data also (Janouskovec et al. 2010, 2012, 2013). Whether revealed another unexpected finding. When they these resolve the ultimate origin of apicomplexan were compared with bacterial environmental sequen- parasitism remains to be seen, but at the very least cing data, it become apparent that environmental they have provided us with a completely new context microbial populations are heavily contaminated with with which to examine the question and new sequences from eukaryotic plastid genomes, presum- perspectives from which to view the parasites. ably derived from cyanobacteria. Comparing these inadvertent but vast surveys of plastid sequences to FINDING CONNECTIONS IN UNEXPECTED PLACES known plastid genomes revealed that Chromera and – BAT PLASMODIUM REVEAL NEW INSIGHTS INTO Vitrella are just the tip of the iceberg: there is a brace THE ORIGINS OF RODENT MALARIA of new and unknown plastid lineages, all clustering at the base of the apicomplexans. Remarkably, all of Just as surveys of coral reefs have revolutionized these are specifically associated with coral reef our understanding of the origins of the phylum environments: coral samples consistently contain Apicomplexa, an even more recent survey of apicom- sequences from apicomplexan-related plastids, and plexan parasites of bats has begun a new revolution, a variety of other environments,

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    10 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us