Journal article
Mitochondrial metabolism of glucose and glutamine is required for intracellular growth of toxoplasma gondii
JI MacRae, L Sheiner, A Nahid, C Tonkin, B Striepen, MJ McConville
Cell Host and Microbe | CELL PRESS | Published : 2012
Abstract
Toxoplasma gondii proliferates within host cell vacuoles where the parasite relies on host carbon and nutrients for replication. To assess how T. gondii utilizes these resources, we mapped the carbon metabolism pathways in intracellular and egressed parasite stages. We determined that intracellular T. gondii stages actively catabolize host glucose via a canonical, oxidative tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, a mitochondrial pathway in which organic molecules are broken down to generate energy. These stages also catabolize glutamine via the TCA cycle and an unanticipated γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) shunt, which generates GABA and additional molecules that enter the TCA cycle. Chemically inhibitin..
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Awarded by National Institutes of Health
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Dr. Maria Doyle and Ms. Milica Ng (University of Melbourne) for bio-informatics analysis and Jenny Chambers (University of Melbourne) for <SUP>13</SUP>C-NMR analyses. This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH AI084415). M.J.M. is a NHMRC Principal Research Fellow. B.S. is a Georgia Research Alliance Distinguished Investigator, and L.S. was supported in part by a fellowship from the Swiss National Fund.