| Literature DB >> 20074366 |
Charles C Kim1, Emily B Wilson, Joseph L DeRisi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaria parasites generate free haem upon catabolism of host haemoglobin during their intraerythrocytic growth cycle. In order to minimize oxidative toxicity of the ferric iron, the free haem molecules are polymerized into the biomineral beta-haematin (commonly referred to as haemozoin). Haemozoin crystals are paramagnetic, and this property can be exploited for the purification of late stage parasites as they contain larger haemozoin crystals than early stage parasites and uninfected cells. Commercially available magnets that were originally developed for the purpose of antibody-mediated cell purification are widely used for this purpose. As these methods are not necessarily optimized for parasite purification, the relationship between magnetic field strength and the quantity and quality of yield during parasite purification was explored.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20074366 PMCID: PMC2817699 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-9-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Magnet configuration schematics. Top and front views of the magnet configurations. Dark lines represent magnet outlines, dashed lines represent the purification columns, and "x" denotes the location of magnetic field measurement. Not drawn to scale.
Figure 2Stronger magnetic fields result in higher haemozoin yields. Haemozoin was purified on LS columns subjected to different magnet configurations.
Purification of iRBCs
| MidiMACS | 4500 | 93.04% | 7.9 × 107 (5.0%) |
| Cylinder | 5100 | 92.77% | 1.10 × 108 (7.0%) |
| 2 × cubes | 8400 | 92.52% | 1.13 × 108 (7.2%) |
Figure 3Magnetic purification stand. Photographs of the designed magnetic purification stand. (A) The stand with the lid removed showing the cylinder magnets. (B) The complete stand with four LS columns in place for purification. A disposable trough commonly used in high-throughput microplate applications fits beneath the column nozzles.
Figure 4Viability of purified parasites. Purified parasites were diluted to 1% parasitaemia and cultured for 3 days after purification. Parasitaemia was monitored daily by blood smear. Means are depicted with error bars representing 95% confidence intervals for the purification stand (n = 4) and MidiMACS (n = 3) replicates. There were no statistically significant differences between the MidiMACS and cylinders at any time point.