Literature detail

Resurrection of the ancestral RH5 invasion ligand provides a molecular explanation for the origin of P. falciparum malaria in humans.

Francis Galaway1 Ryan Yu1 Anastasia Constantinou1 Franck Prugnolle2 Gavin J Wright1
Affiliations 2 institutions
  1. Cell Surface Signalling Laboratory, Wellcome Sanger Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
  2. Laboratoire MIVEGEC, Univ Montpellier, UMR CNRS 5290-IRD224-UM, Montpellier, France.
PMID 31613878 2019 PLoS Biol eng epublish
PubMed DOI Browse context

Article

Publication summary

Many important infectious diseases are the result of zoonoses, in which pathogens that normally infect animals acquire mutations that enable the breaching of species barriers to permit the infection of humans. Our understanding of the molecular events that enable host switching are often limited, and yet this is a fundamentally important question. Plasmodium falciparum, the etiological agent of severe human malaria, evolved following a zoonotic transfer of parasites from gorillas. One gene-rh5-which encodes an essential ligand for the invasion of host erythrocytes, is suspected to have played a critical role in this host switch. Genome comparisons revealed an introgressed sequence in the ancestor of P. falciparum containing rh5, which likely allowed the ancestral parasites to infect both gorilla and human erythrocytes. To test this hypothesis, we resurrected the ancestral introgressed reticulocyte-binding protein homologue 5 (RH5) sequence and used quantitative protein interaction assays to demonstrate that this ancestral protein could bind the basigin receptor from both humans and gorillas. We also showed that this promiscuous receptor binding phenotype of RH5 was shared with the parasite clade that transferred its genome segment to the ancestor of P. falciparum, while the other lineages exhibit host-specific receptor binding, confirming the central importance of this introgression event for Plasmodium host switching. Finally, since its transfer to humans, P. falciparum, and also the RH5 ligand, have evolved a strong human specificity. We show that this subsequent restriction to humans can be attributed to a single amino acid mutation in the RH5 sequence. Our findings reveal a molecular pathway for the origin and evolution of human P. falciparum malaria and may inform molecular surveillance to predict future zoonoses.

Genome, Protozoan Amino Acid Substitution Animals Basigin Binding Sites Carrier Proteins Erythrocytes Gene Expression Genetic Introgression Gorilla gorilla History, Ancient Host Specificity Humans Malaria, Falciparum Models, Molecular Mutation Phylogeny Plasmodium falciparum

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

5 total
2 records
Extraction confidence 0.94
Key finding

Ancestral Plasmodium falciparum RH5 ligand exhibited receptor-binding compatibility with basigin from both humans and gorillas, supporting a molecular mechanism for host switching and receptor-mediated invasion.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We resurrected the ancestral introgressed reticulocyte-binding protein homologue 5 (RH5) sequence and used quantitative protein interaction assays to demonstrate that this ancestral protein could bind the basigin receptor from both humans and gorillas.

Method
protein interaction assays
Receptors
basigin
Extraction confidence 0.94
Key finding

Ancestral Plasmodium falciparum RH5 ligand bound the basigin receptor from gorillas, indicating receptor compatibility across species and a role in cross-species invasion.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We resurrected the ancestral introgressed reticulocyte-binding protein homologue 5 (RH5) sequence and used quantitative protein interaction assays to demonstrate that this ancestral protein could bind the basigin receptor from both humans and gorillas.

Method
protein interaction assays
Receptors
basigin
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.88
Key finding

Genomic comparison and ancestral sequence reconstruction of RH5 showed that introgression enabled cross-species infection of gorillas and humans, and subsequent amino acid mutation in RH5 led to human-specific adaptation of Plasmodium falciparum.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Genome comparisons revealed an introgressed sequence in the ancestor of P. falciparum containing rh5, which likely allowed the ancestral parasites to infect both gorilla and human erythrocytes. We resurrected the ancestral introgressed reticulocyte-binding protein homologue 5 (RH5) sequence and demonstrated binding to basigin receptors from both humans and gorillas, confirming the central importance of this introgression event for Plasmodium host switching.

Genes or proteins
RH5; reticulocyte-binding protein homologue 5; basigin
Analysis methods
genome comparison; ancestral sequence reconstruction; protein interaction assays; phylogenetic analysis
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

An ancestral RH5 protein of Plasmodium falciparum bound both human and gorilla basigin receptors, and a single amino acid mutation later conferred human-specific receptor binding, defining a molecular adaptation that enabled and refined host switching.

Virus
Not specified
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

We resurrected the ancestral introgressed reticulocyte-binding protein homologue 5 (RH5) sequence and used quantitative protein interaction assays to demonstrate that this ancestral protein could bind the basigin receptor from both humans and gorillas. ... We show that this subsequent restriction to humans can be attributed to a single amino acid mutation in the RH5 sequence.

Genes or proteins
RH5
Receptors
basigin
Mutations
single amino acid mutation (exact residue not specified)
Mechanism types
receptor_binding; host_specificity; host_switching
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Evidence supports that Plasmodium falciparum emerged through a zoonotic spillover from gorillas to humans, facilitated by an ancestral RH5 ligand capable of binding to both gorilla and human basigin receptors.

Virus
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Plasmodium falciparum, the etiological agent of severe human malaria, evolved following a zoonotic transfer of parasites from gorillas. Genome comparisons revealed an introgressed sequence containing rh5, which likely allowed the ancestral parasites to infect both gorilla and human erythrocytes.

Method
genome comparisons; protein interaction assays
Study design
molecular evolutionary analysis
Transmission direction
animal-to-human