Abstract

Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasite causing Chagas disease, is a digenetic flagellated protist that infects mammals (including humans) and reduviid insect vectors. Therefore, T. cruzi must colonize different niches in order to complete its life cycle in both hosts. This fact determines the need of adaptations to face challenging environmental cues. The primary environmental challenge, particularly in the insect stages, is poor nutrient availability. In this regard, it is well known that T. cruzi has a flexible metabolism able to rapidly switch from carbohydrates (mainly glucose) to amino acids (mostly proline) consumption. Also established has been the capability of T. cruzi to use glucose and amino acids to support the differentiation process occurring in the insect, from replicative non-infective epimastigotes to non-replicative infective metacyclic trypomastigotes. However, little is known about the possibilities of using externally available and internally stored fatty acids as resources to survive in nutrient-poor environments, and to sustain metacyclogenesis. In this study, we revisit the metabolic fate of fatty acid breakdown in T. cruzi. Herein, we show that during parasite proliferation, the glucose concentration in the medium can regulate the fatty acid metabolism. At the stationary phase, the parasites fully oxidize fatty acids. [U-14C]-palmitate can be taken up from the medium, leading to CO2 production. Additionally, we show that electrons are fed directly to oxidative phosphorylation, and acetyl-CoA is supplied to the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, which can be used to feed anabolic pathways such as the de novo biosynthesis of fatty acids. Finally, we show as well that the inhibition of fatty acids mobilization into the mitochondrion diminishes the survival to severe starvation, and impairs metacyclogenesis.

Highlights

  • T. cruzi, a flagellated parasite, is the causative agent of Chagas disease, a neglected health problem endemic to the Americas [1]

  • Because kissing bugs feed infrequently in nature, an intriguing aspect of T. cruzi biology is how they subsist during long periods of starvation

  • We show that this parasite performs a metabolic switch from glucose consumption to lipid oxidation, and it is able to consume lipids and the lipid-derived fatty acids from both internal origins as well as externally supplied compounds

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Summary

Introduction

T. cruzi, a flagellated parasite, is the causative agent of Chagas disease, a neglected health problem endemic to the Americas [1]. The parasite life cycle is complex, alternating between replicative and non-replicative forms in two types of hosts, mammalians and triatomine insects [2]. After being released from infected cells, trypomastigotes can spread the infection by infecting new cells, or they can be ingested by a triatomine bug during its blood meal. Once the epimastigotes reach the final portion of the digestive tube, they initiate differentiation into non-proliferative, infective metacyclic trypomastigotes. These forms will be expelled during a new blood meal and will be able to infect a new vertebrate host [2,4,5,6]

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