Insights into the intracellular localization, protein associations and artemisinin resistance properties of Plasmodium falciparum K13

Abstract
The emergence of artemisinin (ART) resistance in Plasmodium falciparum intra-erythrocytic parasites has led to increasing treatment failure rates with first-line ART-based combination therapies in Southeast Asia. Decreased parasite susceptibility is caused by K13 mutations, which are associated clinically with delayed parasite clearance in patients and in vitro with an enhanced ability of ring-stage parasites to survive brief exposure to the active ART metabolite dihydroartemisinin. Herein, we describe a panel of K13-specific monoclonal antibodies and gene-edited parasite lines co-expressing epitope-tagged versions of K13 in trans. By applying an analytical quantitative imaging pipeline, we localize K13 to the parasite endoplasmic reticulum, Rab-positive vesicles, and sites adjacent to cytostomes. These latter structures form at the parasite plasma membrane and traffic hemoglobin to the digestive vacuole wherein artemisinin-activating heme moieties are released. We also provide evidence of K13 partially localizing near the parasite mitochondria upon treatment with dihydroartemisinin. Immunoprecipitation data generated with K13-specific monoclonal antibodies identify multiple putative K13-associated proteins, including endoplasmic reticulum-resident molecules, mitochondrial proteins, and Rab GTPases, in both K13 mutant and wild-type isogenic lines. We also find that mutant K13-mediated resistance is reversed upon co-expression of wild-type or mutant K13. These data help define the biological properties of K13 and its role in mediating P. falciparum resistance to ART treatment. The development of drug resistance in Plasmodium falciparum parasites presents a significant impediment to the global fight against malaria. Partial resistance to artemisinin (ART), the core component of current first-line drugs, has swept across Southeast Asia. In P. falciparum-infected patients, ART-resistant parasites show slow rates of clearance following treatment with an ART derivative or ART-based combination therapy. Resistance to partner drugs has also emerged in Southeast Asia, leading to frequent treatment failures. Single amino acid mutations in the P. falciparum K13 protein constitute the primary genetic cause of ART resistance and predict an increased risk of treatment failure. By generating monoclonal antibodies, we have investigated the subcellular localization of K13 in dihydroartemisinin-treated or untreated parasites. Analytical microscopy data localize K13 to or near the endoplasmic reticulum and vesicles that mediate intracellular trafficking, including plasma membrane-associated cytostomes that import host hemoglobin into the parasite. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments with K13-specific monoclonal antibodies identified multiple proteins associated with the endoplasmic reticulum, vesicular trafficking, the cytosol, or the mitochondria, with no apparent differences between K13 mutant and wild-type parasites. We also observed that overexpression of mutant or wild-type K13 in K13 mutant parasites could restore susceptibility, supporting the hypothesis that K13 mutations cause loss of function.
Funding Information
  • National Institutes of Health (R01 AI109023)
  • U.S. Department of Defense (W81XWH1910086)
  • Human Frontier Science Program (LT000976/2016-L)
  • NIH-supported Columbia University Graduate Program (T32 AI106711)
  • National Institutes of Health (R01 AI103280, R21 AI123808, R21 AI130584)
  • Selz Foundation, New York

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