Heckart Adrian, Cocuron Jean-Christophe, Ray Stephanie C, Matheny Gabriella F, Rappleye Chad A, Alonso Ana P
Department of Biological Sciences and BioDiscovery Institute, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, USA.
BioAnalytical Facility, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, USA.
mSystems. 2025 Oct 22;10(10):e0056925. doi: 10.1128/msystems.00569-25. Epub 2025 Sep 8.
is a human fungal pathogen that survives and proliferates within phagocytic immune cells. To sustain growth in the nutrient-limited phagosome environment, the pathogenic yeast scavenges available carbon sources, which must be metabolized through central carbon metabolism for respiration and biomass synthesis. However, carbon metabolic pathways operating in the pathogenic yeast phase have not been extensively mapped. To address this gap, we employed a fluxomic platform using stable isotope tracers to quantify the cellular reaction rates of central carbon metabolism. This approach revealed that, in yeasts, carbon resides within five main reservoirs: fatty acids, proteins, mannitol, nucleic acids, and cell wall components. Carbon conversion efficiency, or biomass yield, was approximately 50%, indicating substantial CO loss from supplemented carbon substrates, glucose, and glutamate. C-labeling analysis demonstrated simultaneous glycolysis and gluconeogenesis, and enriched serine labeling confirmed threonine aldolase activity in serine biosynthesis. Compartmentalization of pyruvate metabolism was evident from the labeling of amino acids derived from pyruvate, with the methylcitrate cycle identified as the primary source of labeled pyruvate. Notably, malic enzyme and pyruvate carboxylase exhibited negligible fluxes, while mitochondrial reactions, particularly CO-producing ones, were the most active. These results offer insight into key metabolic reactions, alternative pathways, and metabolite/enzyme compartmentalization in yeast metabolism. This foundational framework supports future studies aimed at identifying metabolic targets for novel histoplasmosis therapeutics.IMPORTANCETo our knowledge, this study represents the first application of C-metabolic flux analysis to a human fungal pathogen, where we identified carbon reservoirs and quantified the metabolic fluxes of pathogenic yeasts. Our findings demonstrated that metabolizes carbon toward cellular respiration to robustly produce CO and energy but also uses alternative pathways within central metabolism for biosynthesis. Given the potential for other pathogenic fungi to share similar metabolic features, especially biomass, our study offers a comprehensive framework for deciphering fungal metabolism, providing insights into their infection-enabling metabolism and offering a foundation for identifying new therapeutic targets.
是一种人类真菌病原体,可在吞噬性免疫细胞内生存和增殖。为了在营养有限的吞噬体环境中维持生长,致病性酵母会 scavenge 可用的碳源,这些碳源必须通过中心碳代谢进行代谢以进行呼吸和生物量合成。然而,致病性酵母阶段中运行的碳代谢途径尚未得到广泛的描绘。为了填补这一空白,我们采用了一个通量组学平台,使用稳定同位素示踪剂来量化中心碳代谢的细胞反应速率。这种方法表明,在酵母中,碳存在于五个主要储存库中:脂肪酸、蛋白质、甘露醇、核酸和细胞壁成分。碳转化效率或生物量产量约为 50%,表明补充的碳底物、葡萄糖和谷氨酸有大量的 CO 损失。C 标记分析表明同时存在糖酵解和糖异生作用,富集的丝氨酸标记证实了丝氨酸生物合成中的苏氨酸醛缩酶活性。丙酮酸代谢的区室化从源自丙酮酸的氨基酸标记中明显可见,甲基柠檬酸循环被确定为标记丙酮酸的主要来源。值得注意的是,苹果酸酶和丙酮酸羧化酶的通量可忽略不计,而线粒体反应,特别是产生 CO 的反应,最为活跃。这些结果为酵母代谢中的关键代谢反应、替代途径以及代谢物/酶的区室化提供了见解。这个基础框架支持未来旨在确定新型组织胞浆菌病治疗方法的代谢靶点的研究。重要性据我们所知,这项研究代表了 C 代谢通量分析首次应用于人类真菌病原体,我们在其中确定了碳储存库并量化了致病性酵母的代谢通量。我们的研究结果表明,它将碳代谢用于细胞呼吸以大量产生 CO 和能量,但也在中心代谢中使用替代途径进行生物合成。鉴于其他致病真菌可能具有相似的代谢特征,特别是生物量,我们的研究提供了一个全面的框架来解读真菌代谢,深入了解它们的感染性代谢,并为确定新的治疗靶点提供基础。