Leishmania infantum promastigotes have a poor capacity for anaerobic functioning and depend mainly on respiration for their energy generation

Abstract
In earlier studies on the supposedly anaerobic metabolism of Leishmania promastigotes it was suggested that the reduction of fumarate to succinate functions as the main electron sink during anoxia. Interestingly, however, our preliminary results demonstrated that rhodoquinone, an essential component for efficient fumarate reduction in eukaryotes, was absent in L. infantum promastigotes. Therefore, we re-investigated the energy metabolism and succinate production of these promastigotes. Our studies demonstrated that L. infantum promastigotes could, to a certain extent, survive periods without respiration but had a low capacity for anaerobic metabolism. When oxygen could not be used as terminal electron acceptor, the degradation of glucose was severely inhibited, forcing the parasite to reduce its energy expenditure, which resulted in inhibited motility and proliferation. In addition, we studied the mechanism of succinate production under aerobic conditions and showed that in L. infantum promastigotes this succinate was mainly produced via an oxidative pathway, the Krebs cycle, and not significantly via fumarate reduction, which correlated with the absence of rhodoquinone. Taken collectively our studies show that L. infantum promastigotes depend mainly on respiratory chain activity for energy generation, have a poor capacity for anaerobic functioning, and go into metabolic arrest during anoxic conditions.