The malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, was recently shown to operate a branched pathway of tricarboxylic acid (TCA) metabolism. To identify and characterize membrane transporters required for such TCA metabolism in the parasite, we isolated a cDNA for a dicarboxylate–tricarboxylate carrier homolog (PfDTC), synthesized the encoded protein with the use of a cell-free translation system, and determined the substrate specificity of its transport activity with a proteoliposome reconstitution system. PfDTC was found to mediate efficient oxoglutarate–malate, oxoglutarate–oxaloacetate, or oxoglutarate–oxoglutarate exchange across the liposome membrane. Our results suggest that PfDTC may mediate the oxoglutarate–malate exchange across the inner mitochondrial membrane required for the branched pathway of TCA metabolism in the malaria parasite.