posted on 2025-06-06, 11:01authored byHugo Belda, David Bradley, Evangelos Christodoulou, Stephanie D Nofal, Malgorzata Broncel, David Jones, Heledd Davies, M Teresa Bertran, Andrew G Purkiss, Roksana W Ogrodowicz, Dhira Joshi, Nicola O'Reilly, Louise Walport, Andrew Powell, David House, Svend Kjaer, Antoine Claessens, Christian R Landry, Moritz Treeck
Of 250 Plasmodium species, 6 infect humans, with P. falciparum causing over 95% of 600,000 annual malaria-related deaths. Its pathology arises from host cell remodelling driven by over 400 exported parasite proteins, including the FIKK kinase family. About one million years ago, a bird-infecting Plasmodium species crossed into great apes and a single non-exported FIKK kinase gained an export element. This led to a rapid expansion into 15-21 atypical, exported Ser/Thr effector kinases. Here, using genomic and proteomic analyses, we demonstrate FIKK differentiation via changes in subcellular localization, expression timing and substrate motifs, which supports an individual important role in host-pathogen interactions. Structural data and AlphaFold2 predictions reveal fast-evolving loops in the kinase domain that probably enabled rapid functional diversification for substrate preferences. One FIKK evolved exclusive tyrosine phosphorylation, previously thought absent in Plasmodium. Despite divergence of substrate preferences, the atypical ATP binding pocket is conserved and we identified a single compound that inhibits all FIKKs. A pan-specific inhibitor could reduce resistance development and improve malaria control strategies.
Funding
Crick (Grant ID: CC2132, Grant title: Treeck CC2132)
Crick (Grant ID: CC1065, Grant title: STP Chemical Biology)
Crick (Grant ID: CC1068, Grant title: STP Structural Biology)
Crick (Grant ID: CC2030, Grant title: Walport CC2030)
European Research Council (Grant ID: 101044428 - VirulenceControl, Grant title: ERC 101044428 - VirulenceControl)