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Dive into the research topics where Ana Rita Gomes is active.

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Featured researches published by Ana Rita Gomes.


PLOS Biology | 2014

Phosphoinositide Metabolism Links cGMP-Dependent Protein Kinase G to Essential Ca2+ Signals at Key Decision Points in the Life Cycle of Malaria Parasites.

Mathieu Brochet; Mark O. Collins; Terry K. Smith; Eloise Thompson; Sarah Sebastian; Katrin Volkmann; Frank Schwach; Lia Chappell; Ana Rita Gomes; Matthew Berriman; Julian C. Rayner; David A. Baker; Jyoti S. Choudhary; Oliver Billker

Chemical genetics and a global comparative analysis of phosphorylation and phospholipids in vivo shows that PKG is the upstream regulator that induces calcium signals that enables Plasmodium to progress through its complex life cycle.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Transition of Plasmodium Sporozoites into Liver Stage-Like Forms Is Regulated by the RNA Binding Protein Pumilio

Carina S. S. Gomes-Santos; Joanna A. M. Braks; Miguel Prudêncio; Celine Carret; Ana Rita Gomes; Arnab Pain; Theresa Feltwell; Shahid M. Khan; Andrew P. Waters; Chris J. Janse; Gunnar R. Mair; Maria M. Mota

Many eukaryotic developmental and cell fate decisions that are effected post-transcriptionally involve RNA binding proteins as regulators of translation of key mRNAs. In malaria parasites (Plasmodium spp.), the development of round, non-motile and replicating exo-erythrocytic liver stage forms from slender, motile and cell-cycle arrested sporozoites is believed to depend on environmental changes experienced during the transmission of the parasite from the mosquito vector to the vertebrate host. Here we identify a Plasmodium member of the RNA binding protein family PUF as a key regulator of this transformation. In the absence of Pumilio-2 (Puf2) sporozoites initiate EEF development inside mosquito salivary glands independently of the normal transmission-associated environmental cues. Puf2- sporozoites exhibit genome-wide transcriptional changes that result in loss of gliding motility, cell traversal ability and reduction in infectivity, and, moreover, trigger metamorphosis typical of early Plasmodium intra-hepatic development. These data demonstrate that Puf2 is a key player in regulating sporozoite developmental control, and imply that transformation of salivary gland-resident sporozoites into liver stage-like parasites is regulated by a post-transcriptional mechanism.


Cell | 2017

Functional profiling of a plasmodium genome reveals an abundance of essential genes

Ellen Bushell; Ana Rita Gomes; Theo Sanderson; Burcu Anar; Gareth Girling; Colin Herd; Tom Metcalf; Katarzyna Modrzynska; Frank Schwach; Rowena E. Martin; Michael W. Mather; Geoffrey I. McFadden; Leopold Parts; Gavin G. Rutledge; Akhil B. Vaidya; Kai Wengelnik; Julian C. Rayner; Oliver Billker

Summary The genomes of malaria parasites contain many genes of unknown function. To assist drug development through the identification of essential genes and pathways, we have measured competitive growth rates in mice of 2,578 barcoded Plasmodium berghei knockout mutants, representing >50% of the genome, and created a phenotype database. At a single stage of its complex life cycle, P. berghei requires two-thirds of genes for optimal growth, the highest proportion reported from any organism and a probable consequence of functional optimization necessitated by genomic reductions during the evolution of parasitism. In contrast, extreme functional redundancy has evolved among expanded gene families operating at the parasite-host interface. The level of genetic redundancy in a single-celled organism may thus reflect the degree of environmental variation it experiences. In the case of Plasmodium parasites, this helps rationalize both the relative successes of drugs and the greater difficulty of making an effective vaccine.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2015

A Genome-Scale Vector Resource Enables High-Throughput Reverse Genetic Screening in a Malaria Parasite

Ana Rita Gomes; Ellen Bushell; Frank Schwach; Gareth Girling; Burcu Anar; Michael A. Quail; Colin Herd; Claudia Pfander; Katarzyna Modrzynska; Julian C. Rayner; Oliver Billker

Summary The genome-wide identification of gene functions in malaria parasites is hampered by a lack of reverse genetic screening methods. We present a large-scale resource of barcoded vectors with long homology arms for effective modification of the Plasmodium berghei genome. Cotransfecting dozens of vectors into the haploid blood stages creates complex pools of barcoded mutants, whose competitive fitness can be measured during infection of a single mouse using barcode sequencing (barseq). To validate the utility of this resource, we rescreen the P. berghei kinome, using published kinome screens for comparison. We find that several protein kinases function redundantly in asexual blood stages and confirm the targetability of kinases cdpk1, gsk3, tkl3, and PBANKA_082960 by genotyping cloned mutants. Thus, parallel phenotyping of barcoded mutants unlocks the power of reverse genetic screening for a malaria parasite and will enable the systematic identification of genes essential for in vivo parasite growth and transmission.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2017

A Knockout Screen of ApiAP2 Genes Reveals Networks of Interacting Transcriptional Regulators Controlling the Plasmodium Life Cycle

Katarzyna Modrzynska; Claudia Pfander; Lia Chappell; Lu Yu; Catherine Suarez; Kirsten Dundas; Ana Rita Gomes; David Goulding; Julian C. Rayner; Jyoti S. Choudhary; Oliver Billker

Summary A family of apicomplexa-specific proteins containing AP2 DNA-binding domains (ApiAP2s) was identified in malaria parasites. This family includes sequence-specific transcription factors that are key regulators of development. However, functions for the majority of ApiAP2 genes remain unknown. Here, a systematic knockout screen in Plasmodium berghei identified ten ApiAP2 genes that were essential for mosquito transmission: four were critical for the formation of infectious ookinetes, and three were required for sporogony. We describe non-essential functions for AP2-O and AP2-SP proteins in blood stages, and identify AP2-G2 as a repressor active in both asexual and sexual stages. Comparative transcriptomics across mutants and developmental stages revealed clusters of co-regulated genes with shared cis promoter elements, whose expression can be controlled positively or negatively by different ApiAP2 factors. We propose that stage-specific interactions between ApiAP2 proteins on partly overlapping sets of target genes generate the complex transcriptional network that controls the Plasmodium life cycle.


Nature | 2017

Nutrient sensing modulates malaria parasite virulence

Liliana Mancio-Silva; Ksenija Slavic; Margarida T. Grilo Ruivo; Ana Rita Grosso; Katarzyna Modrzynska; Iset Medina Vera; Joana Sales-Dias; Ana Rita Gomes; Cameron Ross MacPherson; Pierre Crozet; Mattia Adamo; Elena Baena-González; Rita Tewari; Manuel Llinás; Oliver Billker; Maria M. Mota

The lifestyle of intracellular pathogens, such as malaria parasites, is intimately connected to that of their host, primarily for nutrient supply. Nutrients act not only as primary sources of energy but also as regulators of gene expression, metabolism and growth, through various signalling networks that enable cells to sense and adapt to varying environmental conditions. Canonical nutrient-sensing pathways are presumed to be absent from the causative agent of malaria, Plasmodium, thus raising the question of whether these parasites can sense and cope with fluctuations in host nutrient levels. Here we show that Plasmodium blood-stage parasites actively respond to host dietary calorie alterations through rearrangement of their transcriptome accompanied by substantial adjustment of their multiplication rate. A kinome analysis combined with chemical and genetic approaches identified KIN as a critical regulator that mediates sensing of nutrients and controls a transcriptional response to the host nutritional status. KIN shares homology with SNF1/AMPKα, and yeast complementation studies suggest that it is part of a functionally conserved cellular energy-sensing pathway. Overall, these findings reveal a key parasite nutrient-sensing mechanism that is critical for modulating parasite replication and virulence.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

PlasmoGEM, a database supporting a community resource for large-scale experimental genetics in malaria parasites

Frank Schwach; Ellen Bushell; Ana Rita Gomes; Burcu Anar; Gareth Girling; Colin Herd; Julian C. Rayner; Oliver Billker

The Plasmodium Genetic Modification (PlasmoGEM) database (http://plasmogem.sanger.ac.uk) provides access to a resource of modular, versatile and adaptable vectors for genome modification of Plasmodium spp. parasites. PlasmoGEM currently consists of >2000 plasmids designed to modify the genome of Plasmodium berghei, a malaria parasite of rodents, which can be requested by non-profit research organisations free of charge. PlasmoGEM vectors are designed with long homology arms for efficient genome integration and carry gene specific barcodes to identify individual mutants. They can be used for a wide array of applications, including protein localisation, gene interaction studies and high-throughput genetic screens. The vector production pipeline is supported by a custom software suite that automates both the vector design process and quality control by full-length sequencing of the finished vectors. The PlasmoGEM web interface allows users to search a database of finished knock-out and gene tagging vectors, view details of their designs, download vector sequence in different formats and view available quality control data as well as suggested genotyping strategies. We also make gDNA library clones and intermediate vectors available for researchers to produce vectors for themselves.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

The Malarial Serine Protease SUB1 Plays an Essential Role in Parasite Liver Stage Development

Catherine Suarez; Katrin Volkmann; Ana Rita Gomes; Oliver Billker; Michael J. Blackman

Transmission of the malaria parasite to its vertebrate host involves an obligatory exoerythrocytic stage in which extensive asexual replication of the parasite takes place in infected hepatocytes. The resulting liver schizont undergoes segmentation to produce thousands of daughter merozoites. These are released to initiate the blood stage life cycle, which causes all the pathology associated with the disease. Whilst elements of liver stage merozoite biology are similar to those in the much better-studied blood stage merozoites, little is known of the molecular players involved in liver stage merozoite production. To facilitate the study of liver stage biology we developed a strategy for the rapid production of complex conditional alleles by recombinase mediated engineering in Escherichia coli, which we used in combination with existing Plasmodium berghei deleter lines expressing Flp recombinase to study subtilisin-like protease 1 (SUB1), a conserved Plasmodium serine protease previously implicated in blood stage merozoite maturation and egress. We demonstrate that SUB1 is not required for the early stages of intrahepatic growth, but is essential for complete development of the liver stage schizont and for production of hepatic merozoites. Our results indicate that inhibitors of SUB1 could be used in prophylactic approaches to control or block the clinically silent pre-erythrocytic stage of the malaria parasite life cycle.


eLife | 2018

Single-cell RNA-seq reveals hidden transcriptional variation in malaria parasites

Adam J. Reid; Arthur M. Talman; Hayley M. Bennett; Ana Rita Gomes; Mandy Sanders; Christopher John Illingworth; Oliver Billker; Matthew Berriman; Mara K. N. Lawniczak

Single-cell RNA-sequencing is revolutionising our understanding of seemingly homogeneous cell populations but has not yet been widely applied to single-celled organisms. Transcriptional variation in unicellular malaria parasites from the Plasmodium genus is associated with critical phenotypes including red blood cell invasion and immune evasion, yet transcriptional variation at an individual parasite level has not been examined in depth. Here, we describe the adaptation of a single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) protocol to deconvolute transcriptional variation for more than 500 individual parasites of both rodent and human malaria comprising asexual and sexual life-cycle stages. We uncover previously hidden discrete transcriptional signatures during the pathogenic part of the life cycle, suggesting that expression over development is not as continuous as commonly thought. In transmission stages, we find novel, sex-specific roles for differential expression of contingency gene families that are usually associated with immune evasion and pathogenesis.


bioRxiv | 2017

Single-cell transcriptomics of malaria parasites

Adam J. Reid; Arthur Talman; Hayley M. Bennett; Ana Rita Gomes; Mandy Sanders; Christopher John Illingworth; Oliver Billker; Matthew Berriman; Mara K. N. Lawniczak

Single-cell RNA-sequencing is revolutionising our understanding of seemingly homogeneous cell populations, but has not yet been applied to single cell organisms. Here, we established a method to successfully investigate transcriptional variation across individual malaria parasites. We discover an unexpected, discontinuous program of transcription during asexual growth previously masked by bulk analyses, and uncover novel variation among sexual stage parasites in their expression of gene families important in host-parasite interactions.

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Oliver Billker

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Julian C. Rayner

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Frank Schwach

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Katarzyna Modrzynska

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Arthur Talman

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Burcu Anar

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Colin Herd

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Ellen Bushell

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Gareth Girling

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Matthew Berriman

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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