AI Article Synopsis

  • Glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation are key processes for generating ATP in most eukaryotes, but microsporidia, a group of parasitic fungi, have lost oxidative phosphorylation and rely on glycolysis or energy from their hosts.
  • The genomes of various Enterocytozoonidae members, including serious parasites for shrimp and crabs, reveal a surprising loss of glycolytic genes across the entire lineage.
  • This study highlights how these pathogens have adapted to their specific lifestyles, showing a complete lack of intrinsic energy generation and providing valuable insights into their biology and the dynamics of host-pathogen interactions.

Article Abstract

Glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation are the fundamental pathways of ATP generation in eukaryotes. Yet in microsporidia, endoparasitic fungi living at the limits of cellular streamlining, oxidative phosphorylation has been lost: energy is obtained directly from the host or, during the dispersive spore stage, via glycolysis. It was therefore surprising when the first sequenced genome from the Enterocytozoonidae - a major family of human and animal-infecting microsporidians - appeared to have lost genes for glycolysis. Here, we sequence and analyse genomes from additional members of this family, shedding new light on their unusual biology. Our survey includes the genome of Enterocytozoon hepatopenaei, a major aquacultural parasite currently causing substantial economic losses in shrimp farming, and Enterospora canceri, a pathogen that lives exclusively inside epithelial cell nuclei of its crab host. Our analysis of gene content across the clade suggests that Ent. canceri's adaptation to intranuclear life is underpinned by the expansion of transporter families. We demonstrate that this entire lineage of pathogens has lost glycolysis and, uniquely amongst eukaryotes, lacks any obvious intrinsic means of generating energy. Our study provides an important resource for the investigation of host-pathogen interactions and reductive evolution in one of the most medically and economically important microsporidian lineages.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13734DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

adaptation intranuclear
8
oxidative phosphorylation
8
decay glycolytic
4
glycolytic pathway
4
pathway adaptation
4
intranuclear parasitism
4
parasitism enterocytozoonidae
4
enterocytozoonidae microsporidia
4
glycolysis
4
microsporidia glycolysis
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!