Acyl Carrier Protein is Essential for Apicoplast Biogenesis in Malaria Parasites Independent of Fatty Acid Synthesis

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Acyl Carrier Protein is Essential for Apicoplast Biogenesis in Malaria Parasites Independent of Fatty Acid Synthesis

Authors

Geher, S. W. R.; Falekun, S.; Pita-Aquino, J. N.; Swift, R. P.; Okada, M.; Jami-Alahmadi, Y.; Wohlschlegel, J. A.; Prigge, S. T.; Sigala, P. A.

Abstract

Acyl carrier protein (ACP) and its 4-phosphopantetheine prosthetic group canonically function as the soluble scaffold for acyl chain assembly and elongation during type-II fatty acid synthesis (FASII). Plasmodium malaria parasites retain a FASII pathway in the apicoplast organelle that has been the subject of considerable scrutiny and confusion. Although apicoplast FASII is essential for P. falciparum growth within mosquitoes and the human liver, this pathway is dispensable and largely inactive in blood-stage parasites that can scavenge host fatty acids. In contrast to FASII enzymes that can be disrupted without fitness defect, we report that knockout or ligand-dependent knockdown of apicoplast ACP is lethal to blood-stage P. falciparum, indicating an essential FASII-independent function. Loss of ACP impairs the biosynthesis of essential isoprenoid precursors and blocks apicoplast biogenesis. Using proximity biotinylation and biochemical interaction studies, we identified a key role for ACP in binding and stabilizing apicoplast pyruvate kinase II (PKII). This critical enzyme is the only known source of nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs) in this organelle and is required for isoprenoid synthesis and apicoplast biogenesis. Our work reveals that ACP knockdown results in destabilization and loss of PKII, which is sufficient to explain ACP essentiality in this stage. This work unveils essential ACP function at a key biochemical hub controlling broad apicoplast metabolism in malaria parasites that is independent of the canonical ACP role in FASII.

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