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Volume 272, Number 35, Issue of August 29, 1997 pp. 21839-21846
©1997 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

Heme Biosynthesis by the Malarial Parasite
IMPORT OF delta -AMINOLEVULINATE DEHYDRASE FROM THE HOST RED CELL

(Received for publication, February 3, 1997, and in revised form, June 19, 1997)

Zahid Q. Bonday Dagger , Shigeru Taketani , P. D. Gupta par and Govindarajan Padmanaban Dagger **

From the Dagger  Department of Biochemistry, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560 012, India,  Kansai Medical University, Fumizonocho Norwich Osaka 570, Japan, par  Center for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad, 500 007, India, and ** Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bangalore 560 064, India

The mouse and human malarial parasites, Plasmodium berghei and Plasmodium falciparum, respectively, synthesize heme de novo following the standard pathway observed in animals despite the availability of large amounts of heme, derived from red cell hemoglobin, which is stored as hemozoin pigment. The enzymes, delta -aminolevulinate dehydrase (ALAD), coproporphyrinogen oxidase, and ferrochelatase are present at strikingly high levels in the P. berghei infected mouse red cell in vivo. The isolated parasite has low levels of ALAD and the data clearly indicate it to be of red cell origin. The purified enzyme preparations from the uninfected red cell and the parasite are identical in kinetic properties, subunit molecular weight, cross-reaction with antibodies to the human enzyme, and N-terminal amino acid sequence. Immunogold electron microscopy of the infected culture indicates that the enzyme is present inside the parasite and, therefore, is not a contaminant. The parasite derives functional ALAD from the host and the enzyme binds specifically to isolated parasite membrane in vitro, suggestive of the involvement of a receptor in its translocation into the parasite. While, ALAD, coproporphyrinogen oxidase, and ferrochelatase from the parasite and the uninfected red cell supernatant have identical subunit molecular weights on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and show immunological cross-reaction with antibodies to the human enzymes, as revealed by Western analysis, the first enzyme of the pathway, namely, delta -aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS) in the parasite, unlike that of the red cell host, does not cross-react with antibodies to the human enzyme. However, ALAS enzyme activity in the parasite is higher than that of the infected red cell supernatant. We therefore conclude that the parasite, while making its own ALAS, imports ALAD and perhaps most of the other enzymes of the pathway from the host to synthesize heme de novo, and this would enable it to segregate this heme from the heme derived from red cell hemoglobin degradation. ALAS of the parasite and the receptor(s) involved in the translocation of the host enzymes into the parasite would be unique drug targets.


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