4.8 Article

Plasmodium falciparum responds to amino acid starvation by entering into a hibernatory state

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1209823109

关键词

protease; artemesinin; autophagy

资金

  1. Burroughs Wellcome Fund for Investigators in Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease, National Institutes of Health [1DP2OD001315]
  2. Center for Quantitative Biology [P50 GM071508]

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The human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is auxotrophic for most amino acids. Its amino acid needs are met largely through the degradation of host erythrocyte hemoglobin; however the parasite must acquire isoleucine exogenously, because this amino acid is not present in adult human hemoglobin. We report that when isoleucine is withdrawn from the culture medium of intra-erythrocytic P. falciparum, the parasite slows its metabolism and progresses through its developmental cycle at a reduced rate. Isoleucine-starved parasites remain viable for 72 h and resume rapid growth upon resupplementation. Protein degradation during starvation is important for maintenance of this hibernatory state. Microarray analysis of starved parasites revealed a 60% decrease in the rate of progression through the normal transcriptional program but no other apparent stress response. Plasmodium parasites do not possess a TOR nutrient-sensing pathway and have only a rudimentary amino acid starvation-sensing eukaryotic initiation factor 2 alpha (eIF2 alpha) stress response. Isoleucine deprivation results in GCN2-mediated phosphorylation of eIF2 alpha, but kinase-knockout clones still are able to hibernate and recover, indicating that this pathway does not directly promote survival during isoleucine starvation. We conclude that P. falciparum, in the absence of canonical eukaryotic nutrient stress-response pathways, can cope with an inconsistent bloodstream amino acid supply by hibernating and waiting for more nutrient to be provided.

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