Plasmodium ARK1 regulates spindle formation during atypical mitosis and forms a divergent chromosomal passenger complex
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Mitosis in Plasmodium spp., the causative agent of malaria, is fundamentally different from model eukaryotes, proceeding via a bipartite microtubule organising centre (MTOC) and lacking canonical regulators such as Polo and Bub1 kinases. During schizogony, asynchronous nuclear replication produces a multinucleate schizont, while rapid male gametogony generates an octaploid nucleus before gamete formation. Here, we identify Aurora-related kinase 1 (ARK1) as a key component of inner MTOC and spindle formation, controlling kinetochore dynamics and driving mitotic progression. Conditional ARK1 depletion disrupts spindle biogenesis, kinetochore segregation, karyokinesis and cytokinesis in both stages, and affects parasite transmission. Interactome analysis reveals ARK1 as the catalytic core of a non-canonical chromosomal passenger complex (CPC) containing two divergent inner centromere proteins (INCENPs) but lacking Survivin and Borealin. Comparative genomics indicates this CPC architecture arose early in Apicomplexa, replacing canonical centromere-targeting modules. These findings uncover a distinct mitotic machinery in Plasmodium and identify the ARK1–INCENP interface as a potential multistage target for malaria therapeutic intervention.