Febrile temperature causes transcriptional downregulation of Plasmodium falciparum Sirtuins through Hsp90-dependent epigenetic modification. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Sirtuins (PfSIR2A and PfSIR2B) are implicated to play pivotal roles in the silencing of sub-telomeric genes and the maintenance of telomere length in P. falciparum 3D7 strain. Here, we identify the key factors that regulate the cellular abundance and activity of these two histone deacetylases. Our results demonstrate that PfSIR2A and PfSIR2B are transcriptionally downregulated at the mid-ring stage in response to febrile temperature. We found that the molecular chaperone PfHsp90 acts as a repressor of PfSIR2A & B transcription. By virtue of its presence in the PfSIR2A & B promoter proximal regions PfHsp90 helps recruiting H3K9me3, conferring heterochromatic state, and thereby leading to the downregulation of PfSIR2A & B transcription. Such transcriptional downregulation can be reversed by the addition of 17-(allylamino)-17-demethoxygeldanamycin or Radicicol, two potent inhibitors of PfHsp90. The reduced occupancy of PfSir2 at sub-telomeric var promoters leads to the de-repression of var genes. Thus, here we uncover how exposure to febrile temperature, a hallmark of malaria, enables the parasites to manipulate the expression of the two prominent epigenetic modifiers PfSir2A and PfSir2B.

publication date

  • February 13, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Epigenesis, Genetic
  • HSP90 Heat-Shock Proteins
  • Malaria, Falciparum
  • Plasmodium falciparum
  • Protozoan Proteins
  • Sirtuins

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85100843066

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1111/mmi.14692

PubMed ID

  • 33538363

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 115

issue

  • 5