5th Conference on Constraint-Based Reconstruction and Analysis (COBRA 2018)
Identifying and Targeting Key Cellular Mechanisms for Proliferation in Malaria Parasites: A Combined Experimental and Computational Strategy
Authors
In this study, we present a combined experimental and computational approach that suggests cellular mechanisms for targeting the malaria parasites. We predict in silico and test in vivo lethal knockouts and synthetic lethal pairs in the blood and liver stages of the malaria infection. We perform computational analyses on a newly developed genome-scale model of the malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei (iPbe), and we use high-throughput gene knockout data generated in the PlasmoGEM project. The comparison between data and gene essentiality predictions allow the understanding of the parasiteâs physiology in the blood and liver stages. We identify the thermodynamic bottlenecks, genetic interactions, and the accessibility to nutrients behind the phenotypes. When we simulate in iPbe the hypothesized physiology, we achieve 80% consistency between the prediction of essential genes and the experimental data. This result indicates that our model iPbe is a valuable framework for the generation of testable hypothesis on antimalarial targets. Overall, the knowledge generated in this framework will serve to tackle more efficiently the malaria parasitesâ metabolism during infection.