A heat-shock response regulated by the PfAP2-HS transcription factor protects human malaria parasites from febrile temperatures.

Elisabet Tintó-Font ORCID logo; LucasMichel-Todó; Timothy J Russell ORCID logo; NúriaCasas-Vila; David J Conway ORCID logo; Zbynek Bozdech ORCID logo; Manuel Llinás ORCID logo; Alfred Cortés ORCID logo; (2021) A heat-shock response regulated by the PfAP2-HS transcription factor protects human malaria parasites from febrile temperatures. Nature microbiology, 6 (9). pp. 1163-1174. ISSN 2058-5276 DOI: 10.1038/s41564-021-00940-w
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Periodic fever is a characteristic clinical feature of human malaria, but how parasites survive febrile episodes is not known. Although the genomes of Plasmodium species encode a full set of chaperones, they lack the conserved eukaryotic transcription factor HSF1, which activates the expression of chaperones following heat shock. Here, we show that PfAP2-HS, a transcription factor in the ApiAP2 family, regulates the protective heat-shock response in Plasmodium falciparum. PfAP2-HS activates the transcription of hsp70-1 and hsp90 at elevated temperatures. The main binding site of PfAP2-HS in the entire genome coincides with a tandem G-box DNA motif in the hsp70-1 promoter. Engineered parasites lacking PfAP2-HS have reduced heat-shock survival and severe growth defects at 37 °C but not at 35 °C. Parasites lacking PfAP2-HS also have increased sensitivity to imbalances in protein homeostasis (proteostasis) produced by artemisinin, the frontline antimalarial drug, or the proteasome inhibitor epoxomicin. We propose that PfAP2-HS contributes to the maintenance of proteostasis under basal conditions and upregulates specific chaperone-encoding genes at febrile temperatures to protect the parasite against protein damage.



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