Literature DB >> 25808846

Light depolarization measurements in malaria: A new job for an old friend.

Maria Rebelo1, Carolina Tempera, Claudia Bispo, Claudia Andrade, Rui Gardner, Howard M Shapiro, Thomas Hänscheid.   

Abstract

The use of flow cytometry in malaria research has increased over the last decade. Most approaches use nucleic acid stains to detect parasite DNA and RNA and require complex multi-color, multi-parameter analysis to reliably detect infected red blood cells (iRBCs). We recently described a novel and simpler approach to parasite detection based on flow cytometric measurement of scattered light depolarization caused by hemozoin (Hz), a pigment formed by parasite digestion of hemoglobin in iRBCs. Depolarization measurement by flow cytometry was described in 1987; however, patent issues restricted its use to a single manufacturer's hematology analyzers until 2009. Although we recently demonstrated that depolarization measurement of Hz, easily implemented on a bench top flow cytometer (Cyflow), provided useful information for malaria work, doubts regarding its application and utility remain in both the flow cytometry and malaria communities, at least in part because instrument manufacturers do not offer the option of measuring depolarized scatter. Under such circumstances, providing other researchers with guidance as to how to do this seemed to offer the most expeditious way to resolve the issue. We accordingly examined how several commercially available flow cytometers (CyFlow SL, MoFLo, Attune and Accuri C6) could be modified to detect depolarization due to the presence of free Hz on solution, or of Hz in leukocytes or erythrocytes from rodent or human blood. All were readily adapted, with substantially equivalent results obtained with lasers emitting over a wide wavelength range. Other instruments now available may also be modifiable for Hz measurement. Cytometric detection of Hz using depolarization is useful to study different aspects of malaria. Adding additional parameters, such as DNA content and base composition and RNA content, can demonstrably provide improved accuracy and sensitivity of parasite detection and characterization, allowing malaria researchers and eventually clinicians to benefit from cytometric technology.
© 2015 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry.

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Keywords:  Key terms: polarization; depolarized side scatter; flow cytometry; hemozoin; light depolarization; malaria

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25808846     DOI: 10.1002/cyto.a.22659

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cytometry A        ISSN: 1552-4922            Impact factor:   4.355


  3 in total

1.  Assessing anti-malarial drug effects ex vivo using the haemozoin detection assay.

Authors:  Maria Rebelo; Carolina Tempera; José F Fernandes; Martin P Grobusch; Thomas Hänscheid
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2015-04-01       Impact factor: 2.979

2.  Efficient monitoring of the blood-stage infection in a malaria rodent model by the rotating-crystal magneto-optical method.

Authors:  Ágnes Orbán; Maria Rebelo; Petra Molnár; Inês S Albuquerque; Adam Butykai; István Kézsmárki
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-03-17       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Transdermal Diagnosis of Malaria Using Vapor Nanobubbles.

Authors:  Maria Rebelo; Rita Grenho; Agnes Orban; Thomas Hänscheid
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2016-02       Impact factor: 6.883

  3 in total

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