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Eukaryotic Cell, February 2005, p. 490-492, Vol. 4, No. 2
1535-9778/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.4.2.490-492.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratory of Malaria and Vector Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland,1 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York, New York2
Received 7 September 2004/ Accepted 17 November 2004
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Our experiments first explored the effects of forced var promoter activity from plasmid pVDH+int, a modification of plasmid pVLH+int carrying the hDHFR (human dihydrofolate reductase) marker instead of a luciferase cassette (Fig. 1). Previous work showed that the activity of pVLH+int in transfected parasites was silenced by a cooperative interaction between the 5' var7b flanking (promoter) region and the var intron (int) during the transition through S phase of the cell cycle (3). We therefore expected this same silencing mechanism to affect the ability of pVDH+int to confer drug resistance to WR99210, a powerful antifolate drug that transfected P. falciparum parasites can survive exposure to only by expressing hDHFR (4). At 25 days after transfection and selection of P. falciparum (FCB line) in the presence of WR99210 (5 nM), drug-resistant parasites were obtained; however, nontransfected parasites in control flasks did not survive. Rescue of the transfected episomes from the parasites and sequencing of the recovered plasmid DNA preparations identified a 460-bp deletion in the middle of the 821-bp int sequence. The remaining 361-bp sequence in the recovered plasmids (termed pVDH+int
2') included all of var intron regions 1 and 3 and a 38-bp residual segment of intron region 2 described by Calderwood et al. (2).
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FIG. 1. Map of plasmid pVDH+int. The 3' hrp2 flanking region provides proper termination for hDHFR expression; int is placed after this termination region.
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3) (2). Parasites transfected with the resulting plasmid construct, pVDH+int
1
3, again yielded drug-resistant populations in the presence of 5 nM WR99210 selection, although only after a longer period (39 days) than with pVDH+int. Sequencing of plasmids rescued from these populations identified a 422-bp deletion in the original 571-bp int
1
3 segment, beginning 29 bp downstream of the start of region 2 (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material). The plasmids were accordingly named pVDH+int149 for the short, 149-bp section remaining from the int
1
3 segment. Transcription of hDHFR was verified by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR, confirming that escape from the cooperative silencing mechanism could be attributed to the loss of the 422-bp deletion in the presence of drug pressure (data not shown).
Chromosomal var gene expression levels in transfected parasites and nontransfected control parasites showed no evidence that the presence of active var promoters on the episomal constructs affected the transcription of endogenous var genes. This conclusion followed from real-time RT-PCR experiments with RNAs from parasites stably transfected with pVDH+int
2', pVDH+int149, and pVDH (counterpart of plasmid pVLH, with no intron) (3) and from nontransfected parasites (Table 1). Unaltered transcription of endogenous var genes in the presence of active episomal var promoters showed that stably transfected parasites can transcribe from more than one var promoter at a time. This result implies that episomal var promoters are not recognized by the allelic exclusion mechanism, perhaps because the chromatin structure that forms with the var promoter and the intron is altered when the sequences of region 2 are deleted. Alternatively, it is possible that only chromosomal copies are counted in the nuclear compartment, while episomal copies remain unrecognized.
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TABLE 1. Chromosomal var gene transcription levels in various transformed parasite linesa
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3 (pVLH+int422) showed only 9 to 15% of the luciferase expression of control plasmid pVLH, with no intron. In contrast, luciferase expression from pVLH+int149, containing the 149-bp sequence from pVDH+int149, was much greater, about 45% of that of the control (Fig. 2).
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FIG. 2. Relative positions of var intron sequences from region 2 and their effect on luciferase activities from pVLH constructs. (A) Locations of segments from region 2 and map of the constructed int149/R123 segment containing three imperfect repeats. (B) Levels of luciferase expression from constructs containing different segments of region 2. Control plasmids pVLH and pVLH+int 1 3 demonstrated complete activity and full silencing of luciferase, respectively. All experiments were repeated at least twice in triplicate, and all Student's t tests yielded P values of <0.05 for comparisons of luciferase levels from pVLH+int 1 3 and the individual plasmids. Bars on the histogram indicate 95% confidence intervals.
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3, pVLH/D5R, and pVLH/D1F; other constructs showed partial silencing ranging from 20 to 80%, depending on the length of the inserted fragment (Fig. 2B). We also tested a stretch of three imperfect repeats (49, 48, and 52 bp in the center of region 2) (Fig. 2A; see also Fig. S1 in the supplemental material) for silencing activity. Repeats of this type are frequently found in var introns and contain some of the Inr-like elements previously noted by Calderwood et al. (2). The plasmid containing these three repeats (pVLH/R123) showed less silencing than constructs such as pVLH/D3R and pVLH/D4F, which contained different intron sequences of comparable or smaller size (Fig. 2B). Taken together, these results suggest that cooperative silencing involves structural complexities of the intron, extending across hundreds of nucleotides of region 2. Interestingly, a var gene conserved in many P. falciparum isolates, varCOMMON, contains an intron that is naturally missing region 2. The varCOMMON gene has been found to be constitutively transcribed in an unusual stage-specific pattern (5, 10), consistent with the idea that elements of region 2 have a key role in var gene silencing.
The var introns have their own promoter activity and produce var-associated "sterile" transcripts that are thought to be involved in gene regulation (2, 8). We have tested whether this promoter activity resides within the 422-bp subsequence of region 2 that was deleted from pVDH+int
2'. Substitution of this subsequence for the 5' var7b flanking region upstream of luc in pVLH yielded a plasmid that produced the same luciferase activity in transfected parasites as p2LH-1, a promoter construct that contains all of region 2 (2) (data not shown). These results locate promoter activity within the same intron subsequence as silencing activity, lending further support for a role of silent transcripts in epigenetic control.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://ec.asm.org/. ![]()
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