Commitment to the production of female and male gametocytes was studied in the NF54 line of the human malaria
parasite Plasmodium falciparum. The development of sibling parasites derived from individual schizonts was followed, and
2 antisera against the female gametocyte-specific protein Pfg377 and the male gametocyte-specific protein α-tubulin II
were used to determine the sex of sibling gametocytes. The experiment showed that individual cohorts of sibling
gametocytes were stained in a mutually exclusive fashion by only one or the other antiserum, indicating that individual
schizonts committed to yield sexual parasite progeny produce gametocytes of the same sex. This work suggests that in P.
falciparum commitment to sexual differentiation occurs prior to schizont maturation, at the same moment when the sex
of the resulting gametocytes is determined.