4.8 Article

Branched tricarboxylic acid metabolism in Plasmodium falciparum

Journal

NATURE
Volume 466, Issue 7307, Pages 774-U16

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature09301

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Burroughs Wellcome Fund
  2. NIH [1DP2OD001315-01, R01 AI078063]
  3. Beckman Young Investigators award
  4. NSF [CBET-0941143]
  5. Center for Quantitative Biology [P50 GM071508]
  6. NIAID, NIH [AI028398]

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A central hub of carbon metabolism is the tricarboxylic acid cycle 1, which serves to connect the processes of glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, respiration, amino acid synthesis and other biosynthetic pathways. The protozoan intracellular malaria parasites (Plasmodium spp.), however, have long been suspected of possessing a significantly streamlined carbon metabolic network in which tricarboxylic acid metabolism plays a minor role(2). Blood-stage Plasmodium parasites rely almost entirely on glucose fermentation for energy and consume minimal amounts of oxygen(3), yet the parasite genome encodes all of the enzymes necessary for a complete tricarboxylic acid cycle(4). Here, by tracing C-13-labelled compounds using mass spectrometry(5), we show that tricarboxylic acid metabolism in the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is largely disconnected from glycolysis and is organized along a fundamentally different architecture from the canonical textbook pathway. We find that this pathway is not cyclic, but rather is a branched structure in which the major carbon sources are the amino acids glutamate and glutamine. As a consequence of this branched architecture, several reactions must run in the reverse of the standard direction, thereby generating two-carbon units in the form of acetyl-coenzyme A. We further show that glutamine-derived acetyl-coenzyme A is used for histone acetylation, whereas glucose-derived acetyl-coenzyme A is used to acetylate amino sugars. Thus, the parasite has evolved two independent production mechanisms for acetyl-coenzyme A with different biological functions. These results significantly clarify our understanding of the Plasmodium metabolic network and highlight the ability of altered variants of central carbon metabolism to arise in response to unique environments.

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