keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34778983/mistimed-malaria-parasites-re-synchronise-with-host-feeding-fasting-rhythms-by-shortening-the-duration-of-intra-erythrocytic-development
#21
REVIEW
Aidan J O'Donnell, Megan A Greischar, Sarah E Reece
AIMS: Malaria parasites exhibit daily rhythms in the intraerythrocytic development cycle (IDC) that underpins asexual replication in the blood. The IDC schedule is aligned with the timing of host feeding-fasting rhythms. When the IDC schedule is perturbed to become mismatched to host rhythms, it readily reschedules but it is not known how. METHODS: We intensively follow four groups of infections that have different temporal alignments between host rhythms and the IDC schedule for 10 days, before and after the peak in asexual densities...
November 14, 2021: Parasite Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34493324/effects-of-insemination-and-blood-feeding-on-locomotor-activity-of-wild-derived-females-of-the-malaria-mosquito-anopheles-coluzzii
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amadou S Traoré, Angélique Porciani, Nicolas Moiroux, Roch K Dabiré, Frédéric Simard, Carlo Costantini, Karine Mouline
BACKGROUND: Behavioural shifts in the canonical location and timing of biting have been reported in natural populations of anopheline malaria vectors following the implementation of insecticide-based indoor vector control interventions. These modifications increase the likelihood of human-vector contact and allow mosquitoes to avoid insecticides, both conditions being favourable to residual transmission of the malarial parasites. The biting behaviour of mosquitoes follows rhythms that are under the control of biological clocks and environmental conditions, modulated by physiological states...
September 7, 2021: Parasites & Vectors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34387713/-medications-when-travelling-with-underlying-inflammatory-rheumatic-disease
#23
REVIEW
K Rose, C Iking-Konert
Travelling poses particular challenges for patients with rheumatic diseases. This article provides specific guidance on how best to manage medication while away from home. Besides outlining advice on basic logistic issues, such as the transportation, importation and storage of drugs, the article concentrates on travelling while receiving immunosuppressive therapy and carrying narcotics. Especially when transporting narcotics, travel requires careful planning in advance in close collaboration with physicians on account of the strict and internationally diverse import restrictions on controlled substances...
August 13, 2021: Zeitschrift Für Rheumatologie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34285807/daily-rhythms-of-both-host-and-parasite-affect-antimalarial-drug-efficacy
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alíz T Y Owolabi, Sarah E Reece, Petra Schneider
Background and objectives: Circadian rhythms contribute to treatment efficacy in several non-communicable diseases. However, chronotherapy (administering drugs at a particular time-of-day) against infectious diseases has been overlooked. Yet, the daily rhythms of both hosts and disease-causing agents can impact the efficacy of drug treatment. We use the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium chabaudi , to test whether the daily rhythms of hosts, parasites and their interactions affect sensitivity to the key antimalarial, artemisinin...
2021: Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34022919/human-biting-rhythm-of-anopheles-gambiae-giles-1902-diptera-culicidae-and-sleeping-behaviour-of-pregnant-women-in-a-lagoon-area-in-southern-benin
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Armel Djènontin, Aziz Bouraima, Christophe Soares, Seun Egbinola, Gilles Cottrell
OBJECTIVE: In the framework of EVALMOUS study aiming to assess the use and effectiveness of mosquito nets by pregnant women and other members of their household in a lagoon area in southern Benin, the behaviour of pregnant women relative to the time they go to bed using the net were recorded. Malaria vectors biting rhythm, Plasmodium falciparum infection and insecticide resistance genes in malaria vectors were also determined. RESULTS: Overall, 3848 females of Anopheles gambiae s...
May 22, 2021: BMC Research Notes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33608011/ecology-of-asynchronous-asexual-replication-the-intraerythrocytic-development-cycle-of-plasmodium-berghei-is-resistant-to-host-rhythms
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aidan J O'Donnell, Sarah E Reece
BACKGROUND: Daily periodicity in the diverse activities of parasites occurs across a broad taxonomic range. The rhythms exhibited by parasites are thought to be adaptations that allow parasites to cope with, or exploit, the consequences of host activities that follow daily rhythms. Malaria parasites (Plasmodium) are well-known for their synchronized cycles of replication within host red blood cells. Whilst most species of Plasmodium appear sensitive to the timing of the daily rhythms of hosts, and even vectors, some species present no detectable rhythms in blood-stage replication...
February 19, 2021: Malaria Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32867164/role-of-melatonin-in-the-synchronization-of-asexual-forms-in-the-parasite-plasmodium-falciparum
#27
REVIEW
Maneesh Kumar Singh, Bárbara Karina de Menezes Dias, Célia R S Garcia
The indoleamine compound melatonin has been extensively studied in the regulation of the circadian rhythm in nearly all vertebrates. The effects of melatonin have also been studied in Protozoan parasites, especially in the synchronization of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum via a complex downstream signalling pathway. Melatonin activates protein kinase A (PfPKA) and requires the activation of protein kinase 7 (PfPK7), PLC-IP3 , and a subset of genes from the ubiquitin-proteasome system. In other parasites, such as Trypanosoma cruzi and Toxoplasma gondii , melatonin increases inflammatory components, thus amplifying the protective response of the host's immune system and affecting parasite load...
August 27, 2020: Biomolecules
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32781954/host-circadian-clocks-do-not-set-the-schedule-for-the-within-host-replication-of-malaria-parasites
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aidan J O'Donnell, Kimberley F Prior, Sarah E Reece
Circadian clocks coordinate organisms' activities with daily cycles in their environment. Parasites are subject to daily rhythms in the within-host environment, resulting from clock-control of host activities, including immune responses. Parasites also exhibit rhythms in their activities: the timing of within-host replication by malaria parasites is coordinated to host feeding rhythms. Precisely which host feeding-related rhythm(s) parasites align with and how this is achieved are unknown. Understanding rhythmic replication in malaria parasites matters because it underpins disease symptoms and fuels transmission investment...
August 12, 2020: Proceedings. Biological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32488076/malaria-parasites-regulate-intra-erythrocytic-development-duration-via-serpentine-receptor-10-to-coordinate-with-host-rhythms
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amit K Subudhi, Aidan J O'Donnell, Abhinay Ramaprasad, Hussein M Abkallo, Abhinav Kaushik, Hifzur R Ansari, Alyaa M Abdel-Haleem, Fathia Ben Rached, Osamu Kaneko, Richard Culleton, Sarah E Reece, Arnab Pain
Malaria parasites complete their intra-erythrocytic developmental cycle (IDC) in multiples of 24 h suggesting a circadian basis, but the mechanism controlling this periodicity is unknown. Combining in vivo and in vitro approaches utilizing rodent and human malaria parasites, we reveal that: (i) 57% of Plasmodium chabaudi genes exhibit daily rhythms in transcription; (ii) 58% of these genes lose transcriptional rhythmicity when the IDC is out-of-synchrony with host rhythms; (iii) 6% of Plasmodium falciparum genes show 24 h rhythms in expression under free-running conditions; (iv) Serpentine receptor 10 (SR10) has a 24 h transcriptional rhythm and disrupting it in rodent malaria parasites shortens the IDC by 2-3 h; (v) Multiple processes including DNA replication, and the ubiquitin and proteasome pathways, are affected by loss of coordination with host rhythms and by disruption of SR10...
June 2, 2020: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32409471/the-malaria-parasite-has-an-intrinsic-clock
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Filipa Rijo-Ferreira, Victoria A Acosta-Rodriguez, John H Abel, Izabela Kornblum, Ines Bento, Gokhul Kilaru, Elizabeth B Klerman, Maria M Mota, Joseph S Takahashi
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 Plasmodium chabaudi 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...
May 15, 2020: Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32193470/video-recording-can-conveniently-assay-mosquito-locomotor-activity
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maisa da Silva Araujo, Fang Guo, Michael Rosbash
Anopheles gambiae and Aedes aegypti are perhaps the best studied mosquito species and important carriers of human malaria and arbovirus, respectively. Mosquitoes have daily rhythms in behaviors and show a wide range of activity patterns. Although Anopheles is known to be principally nocturnal and Aedes principally diurnal, details of mosquito activity are not easily assayed in the laboratory. We recently described FlyBox, a simple tracking system for assaying Drosophila locomotor activity rhythms and thought that it might also be applicable to monitoring mosquito activity...
March 19, 2020: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32053788/periodic-parasites-and-daily-host-rhythms
#32
REVIEW
Kimberley F Prior, Filipa Rijo-Ferreira, Patricia A Assis, Isabella C Hirako, David R Weaver, Ricardo T Gazzinelli, Sarah E Reece
Biological rhythms appear to be an elegant solution to the challenge of coordinating activities with the consequences of the Earth's daily and seasonal rotation. The genes and molecular mechanisms underpinning circadian clocks in multicellular organisms are well understood. In contrast, the regulatory mechanisms and fitness consequences of biological rhythms exhibited by parasites remain mysterious. Here, we explore how periodicity in parasite traits is generated and why daily rhythms matter for parasite fitness...
February 12, 2020: Cell Host & Microbe
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31937300/testing-possible-causes-of-gametocyte-reduction-in-temporally-out-of-synch-malaria-infections
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mary L Westwood, Aidan J O'Donnell, Petra Schneider, Gregory F Albery, Kimberley F Prior, Sarah E Reece
BACKGROUND: The intraerythrocytic development cycle (IDC) of the rodent malaria Plasmodium chabaudi is coordinated with host circadian rhythms. When this coordination is disrupted, parasites suffer a 50% reduction in both asexual stages and sexual stage gametocytes over the acute phase of infection. Reduced gametocyte density may not simply follow from a loss of asexuals because investment into gametocytes ("conversion rate") is a plastic trait; furthermore, the densities of both asexuals and gametocytes are highly dynamic during infection...
January 14, 2020: Malaria Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31796010/biology-and-bionomics-of-malaria-vectors-in-india-existing-information-and-what-more-needs-to-be-known-for-strategizing-elimination-of-malaria
#34
REVIEW
Sarala K Subbarao, Nutan Nanda, Manju Rahi, Kamaraju Raghavendra
India has committed to eliminate malaria by 2030. The national framework for malaria elimination released by the Government of India plans to achieve this goal through strategic planning in a phased manner. Since vector control is a major component of disease management and vector elimination, it requires a thorough understanding of the biology and bionomics of malaria vectors exhibiting definite distribution patterns in diverse ecosystems in the country. Although a wealth of information is available on these aspects, lesser-known data are on biting time and rhythm, and the magnitude of outdoor transmission by the vectors which are crucial for effective implementation of the key vector control interventions...
December 3, 2019: Malaria Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31358780/host-circadian-rhythms-are-disrupted-during-malaria-infection-in-parasite-genotype-specific-manners
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kimberley F Prior, Aidan J O'Donnell, Samuel S C Rund, Nicholas J Savill, Daan R van der Veen, Sarah E Reece
Infection can dramatically alter behavioural and physiological traits as hosts become sick and subsequently return to health. Such "sickness behaviours" include disrupted circadian rhythms in both locomotor activity and body temperature. Host sickness behaviours vary in pathogen species-specific manners but the influence of pathogen intraspecific variation is rarely studied. We examine how infection with the murine malaria parasite, Plasmodium chabaudi, shapes sickness in terms of parasite genotype-specific effects on host circadian rhythms...
July 29, 2019: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31262362/time-of-day-of-blood-feeding-effects-on-mosquito-life-history-and-malaria-transmission
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aidan J O'Donnell, Samuel S C Rund, Sarah E Reece
BACKGROUND: Biological rhythms allow organisms to compartmentalise and coordinate behaviours, physiologies, and cellular processes with the predictable daily rhythms of their environment. There is increasing recognition that the biological rhythms of mosquitoes that vector parasites are important for global health. For example, whether perturbations in blood foraging rhythms as a consequence of vector control measures can undermine disease control. To address this, we explore the impacts of altered timing of blood-feeding on mosquito life history traits and malaria transmission...
July 2, 2019: Parasites & Vectors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30670073/diel-flight-activity-of-wild-caught-anopheles-farauti-s-s-and-an-hinesorum-malaria-mosquitoes-from-northern-queensland-australia
#37
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Giles E Duffield, Dominic J Acri, Gary F George, Aaron D Sheppard, Nigel W Beebe, Scott A Ritchie, Thomas R Burkot
BACKGROUND: Species in the Anopheles farauti complex are major malaria vectors in the Asia Pacific region. Anopheline mosquitoes exhibit circadian and diel rhythms in sugar- and blood-feeding (biting), flight activity, oviposition, and in some species, a short-lived dusk/early night associated swarming behaviour during which mating occurs. A behavioural study of wild-caught mosquitoes from Queensland, Australia was conducted to investigate the differences in diel rhythmic flight activity between two cryptic species in several reproductive states...
January 22, 2019: Parasites & Vectors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30360532/odor-specific-daily-rhythms-in-the-olfactory-sensitivity-and-behavior-of-aedes-aegypti-mosquitoes
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diane F Eilerts, Morgen VanderGiessen, Elizabeth A Bose, Kyera Broxton, Clément Vinauger
Many biological processes and behaviors in mosquitoes display rhythmic patterns, allowing for fine tuning to cyclic environmental conditions. In mosquitoes, vector-host interactions are primarily mediated by olfactory signals. Previous studies have established that, in the malaria vector Anopheles gambiae , rhythmic expression of odorant binding proteins and takeout proteins in the antenna resulted in a corresponding rhythm in olfactory sensitivity to relevant host odors. However, it remained unclear how rhythms observed in olfactory sensitivity affect or explain rhythms in behavioral output, which ultimately impacts disease transmission...
October 23, 2018: Insects
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30282657/adaptive-periodicity-in-the-infectivity-of-malaria-gametocytes-to-mosquitoes
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Petra Schneider, Samuel S C Rund, Natasha L Smith, Kimberley F Prior, Aidan J O'Donnell, Sarah E Reece
Daily rhythms in behaviour, physiology and molecular processes are expected to enable organisms to appropriately schedule activities according to consequences of the daily rotation of the Earth. For parasites, this includes capitalizing on periodicity in transmission opportunities and for hosts/vectors, this may select for rhythms in immune defence. We examine rhythms in the density and infectivity of transmission forms (gametocytes) of rodent malaria parasites in the host's blood, parasite development inside mosquito vectors and potential for onwards transmission...
October 3, 2018: Proceedings. Biological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29902432/malaria-makes-the-most-of-mealtimes
#40
COMMENT
Sarah E Reece, Kimberley F Prior
Successive synchronized cycles of Plasmodium replication in the host's blood causes the symptoms of malaria and fuels disease transmission. In this issue of Cell Host & Microbe, Hirako et al. (2018) reveal that host circadian rhythms of inflammation and metabolism are responsible for the timing of cycles of parasite replication.
June 13, 2018: Cell Host & Microbe
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