Department of Tropical Medicine, The Jikei University School of Medicine, 3-25-8, Nishi-Shinbashi, Tokyo 105-8461, Japan.
Malar J. 2013 Jan 16;12:19. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-12-19.
Malaria is the most significant human parasitic disease, and yet understanding of the energy metabolism of the principle pathogen, Plasmodium falciparum, remains to be fully elucidated. Amino acids were shown to be essential nutritional requirements since early times and much of the current knowledge of Plasmodium energy metabolism is based on early biochemical work, performed using basic analytical techniques, carried out almost exclusively on human plasma with considerable inter-individual variability.
In order to further characterize the fate of amino acid metabolism in malaria parasite, multivariate analysis using statistical modelling of amino acid concentrations (aminogram) of plasma and liver were determined in host infected with rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium yoelii.
Comprehensive and statistical aminogram analysis revealed that P. yoelii infection caused drastic change of plasma and liver aminogram, and altered intra- and inter-correlation of amino acid concentration in plasma and liver. These findings of the interactions between amino acids and Plasmodium infection may provide insight to reveal the interaction between nutrients and parasites.
疟疾是最严重的人类寄生虫病,但人们对主要病原体疟原虫的能量代谢仍未完全了解。从早期开始,氨基酸就被证明是必需的营养物质,目前对疟原虫能量代谢的大部分了解都是基于早期的生化工作,这些工作使用基本的分析技术,几乎完全在人类血浆中进行,由于个体间的差异较大,其结果的可信度受到了限制。
为了进一步描述疟原虫氨基酸代谢的命运,我们使用统计建模方法对感染了啮齿动物疟原虫疟原虫(Plasmodium yoelii)的宿主的血浆和肝脏中的氨基酸浓度(氨基谱)进行了多变量分析。
全面和统计氨基谱分析表明,疟原虫感染导致血浆和肝脏氨基谱发生剧烈变化,并改变了血浆和肝脏中氨基酸浓度的内在和相互相关性。这些关于氨基酸与疟原虫感染相互作用的发现,可能为揭示营养物质与寄生虫之间的相互作用提供了线索。