Metabolic Host Responses to Malarial Infection during the Intraerythrocytic Developmental Cycle

Abstract

Background: The malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum undergoes a complex life cycle, including an intraerythrocytic developmental cycle, during which it is metabolically dependent on the infected human red blood cell (RBC). To describe whole cell metabolic activity within both P. falciparum and RBCs during the asexual reproduction phase of the intraerythrocytic developmental cycle, we developed an integrated host-parasite metabolic modeling framework driven by time-dependent gene expression data. Results: We validated the model by reproducing the experimentally determined 1) stage-specific production of biomass components and their precursors in the parasite and 2) metabolite concentration changes in the medium of P. falciparum-infected RBC cultures. The model allowed us to explore time- and strain-dependent P. falciparum metabolism and hypothesize how host cell metabolism alters in response to malarial infection. Specifically, the metabolic analysis showed that uninfected RBCs that coexist with infected cells in the same culture decrease their production of 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate, an oxygen-carrying regulator, reducing the ability of hemoglobin in these cells to release oxygen. Furthermore, in response to parasite-induced oxidative stress, infected RBCs downgraded their glycolytic flux by using the pentose phosphate pathway and secreting ribulose-5-phosphate. This mechanism links individually observed experimental phenomena, such as glycolytic inhibition and ribulose-5-phosphatesecretion, to the oxidative stress response.Conclusions: Although the metabolic model does not incorporate regulatory mechanisms per se, alterations in gene expression levels caused by regulatory mechanisms are manifested in the model as altered metabolic states. This provides the model the capability to capture complex multicellular host-pathogen metabolic interactions of the infected RBC culture.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Aug 08, 2016
Accession Number
AD1018305

Entities

People

  • Anders Wallqvist
  • Jaques Reifman
  • Ping Ye
  • Shivendra G Tewari
  • Xin Fang

Organizations

  • United States Army Medical Research and Development Command

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Amines
  • Amino Acids
  • Biology
  • Blood
  • Blood Cells
  • Cells
  • Chemistry
  • Computational Biology
  • Experimental Data
  • Gene Expression
  • Malaria
  • Metabolic Pathways
  • Metabolism
  • Oxidative Stress
  • Production Rate
  • Spores
  • Systems Biology

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Cardiovascular Physiology
  • Parasitology and Pharmacology of Malaria.