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Kinesin-8B controls basal body function and flagellum formation and is key to malaria parasite transmission

Authors :
David J. P. Ferguson
Sue Vaughan
Anthony A. Holder
Carolyn A. Moores
Edward Rea
Steven Abel
Mohammad Zeeshan
Michael J. Delves
Karine G. Le Roch
Declan Brady
Emilie Daniel
Rita Tewari
Alana Burrrell
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Eukaryotic flagella are conserved microtubule-based organelles that drive cell motility. Plasmodium, the causative agent of malaria, has a single flagellate stage: the male gamete in the mosquito. Three rounds of endomitotic division together with an unusual mode of flagellum assembly rapidly produce eight motile gametes. These processes are tightly coordinated but their regulation is poorly understood. To understand this important developmental stage, we studied the function and location of the microtubule-based motor kinesin-8B, using gene-targeting, electron microscopy and live cell imaging. Deletion of the kinesin-8B gene showed no effect on mitosis but disrupted 9+2 axoneme assembly and flagellum formation during male gamete development and also completely ablated parasite transmission. Live cell imaging showed that kinesin-8B-GFP did not colocalise with kinetochores in the nucleus but instead revealed dynamic, cytoplasmic localisation with the basal bodies and the assembling axoneme during flagellum formation. We thus uncovered an unexpected role for kinesin-8B in parasite flagellum formation that is vital for the parasite life cycle.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....932d85a2c9ad4fe15c19754fc40c639d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/686568