A paternal lactate dehydrogenase critically enhances male gametogenesis and malaria transmission
Malaria blood stage parasite development relies on glycolysis to generate ATP, which requires pyruvate to lactate conversion by an essential lactate dehydrogenase enzyme (LDH1). Conversely, parasites developing in the mosquito employ mitochondrial chemiosmosis for ATP production. The source of ATP during transition from vertebrate to insect is less clear; gametes form in the mosquito midgut lumen within minutes of gametocyte ingestion, and while female gametes possess a mitochondrion, this organelle is absent from male gametes (microgametes). Here, we investigate a second LDH enzyme (LDH2) found exclusively in male gametocytes and microgametes. Knockout of Plasmodium berghei LDH2 expression reduces the number and size of exflagellation centres and radically diminishes oocyst development in Anopheles stephensi mosquitoes. Our data indicate that LDH2 supplements LDH1 activity to facilitate the cytokinesis step of male gametogenesis, while LDH1 alone is sufficient for motility of free-swimming microgametes. Our results point to a key role for glycolytic ATP production in microgamete formation and function and identify LDH activity as a potential malaria transmission-blocking drug target.
Item Type | Article |
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Elements ID | 347790 |
Official URL | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-05832-1 |
Date Deposited | 28 Jul 2025 08:51 |