Skip to main content

The malaria parasite has an intrinsic clock.

Author
Abstract
:

Malarial rhythmic fevers are the consequence of the synchronous bursting of red blood cells (RBCs) on completion of the malaria parasite asexual cell cycle. Here, we hypothesized that an intrinsic clock in the parasite underlies the 24-hour-based rhythms of RBC bursting in mice. We show that parasite rhythms are flexible and lengthen to match the rhythms of hosts with long circadian periods. We also show that malaria rhythms persist even when host food intake is evenly spread across 24 hours, suggesting that host feeding cues are not required for synchrony. Moreover, we find that the parasite population remains synchronous and rhythmic even in an arrhythmic clock mutant host. Thus, we propose that parasite rhythms are generated by the parasite, possibly to anticipate its circadian environment.

Year of Publication
:
2020
Journal
:
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Volume
:
368
Issue
:
6492
Number of Pages
:
746-753
Date Published
:
2020
ISSN Number
:
0036-8075
URL
:
https://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=32409471
DOI
:
10.1126/science.aba2658
Short Title
:
Science
Download citation