Literature DB >> 10785375

Utilization of leucine and acetate as carbon sources for sterol and fatty acid biosynthesis by Old and New World Leishmania species, Endotrypanum monterogeii and Trypanosoma cruzi.

M L Ginger1, M C Prescott, D G Reynolds, M L Chance, L J Goad.   

Abstract

The relative roles of acetate and leucine in the provision of a carbon source for fatty acid and sterol biosynthesis in several trypanosomatid species were investigated using 14C- and 13C-labelled acetate, glucose and leucine as substrates. Promastigotes of Leishmania species synthesized a large proportion of their sterol from leucine. L. major (LV39), L. amazonensis and L. mexicana were the most efficient utilizers of leucine, producing at least 70-77% of their sterol from leucine; L. braziliensis, L. donovani and L. tropica apparently produced less sterol from leucine (23-36%) and L. major (LV561), L. adleri and L. panamamensis were intermediate, utilizing leucine to provide 51-58% of their sterol. In all the cases the balance of the sterol produced was apparently synthesized from carbon arising from acetate. The related trypanosomatid Endotrypanum monterogeii also produced a large amount (77%) of its sterol from leucine rather than acetate. By contrast Trypanosoma cruzi elaborated only 8% of its sterol from leucine and used acetate far more effectively than the Leishmania species for sterol biosynthesis. The fatty acid moieties of the triacylglycerols and phospholipids were produced from acetate. Leucine was also incorporated into the fatty acids to varying extents in the different organisms showing that leucine can also be metabolized in trypanosomatids to generate acetyl-CoA.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10785375     DOI: 10.1046/j.1432-1327.2000.01261.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Biochem        ISSN: 0014-2956


  16 in total

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10.  Metabolomics-Based Study of Logarithmic and Stationary Phases of Promastigotes in Leishmania major by 1H NMR Spectroscopy.

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