Viruses may hijack glycolysis, glutaminolysis or fatty acid β-oxidation of host cells to provide energy and macromolecules required for efficient viral replication. Marek's disease virus (MDV) causes a deadly lymphoproliferative disease in chickens and modulates metabolism of host cells. Metabolic analysis of MDV-infected chicken embryonic fibroblasts (CEFs) identified elevated levels of metabolites involved in glutamine catabolism such as glutamic acid, alanine, glycine, pyrimidine and creatine. In addition, our results demonstrate that glutamine uptake is elevated by MDV-infected cells in vitro. Although glutamine, but not glucose, deprivation significantly reduced cell viability in MDV-infected cells, both glutamine and glucose were required for virus replication and spread. In the presence of minimum glutamine requirements based on optimal cell viability, virus replication was partially rescued by the addition of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediate, α-ketoglutarate, suggesting that exogenous glutamine is an essential carbon source for the TCA cycle to generate energy and macromolecules required for virus replication. Surprisingly, the inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1a (CPT1a), which is elevated in MDV-infected cells, by chemical (etomoxir) or physiological (Manoly-CoA) inhibitors did not reduce MDV replication indicating that MDV replication does not require fatty acid β-oxidation. Taken together, our results demonstrate that MDV infection activates anaplerotic substrate from glucose to glutamine to provide energy and macromolecules required for MDV replication, and optimal MDV replication occurs when the cells do not depend on mitochondrial β-oxidation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]