| Literature DB >> 25879757 |
Maria Rebelo1,2, Carolina Tempera3, José F Fernandes4,5,6, Martin P Grobusch7,8,9, Thomas Hänscheid10,11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In vitro sensitivity assays are crucial to detect and monitor drug resistance. Plasmodium falciparum has developed resistance to almost all anti-malarial drugs. Although different in vitro drug assays are available, some of their inherent characteristics limit their application, especially in the field. A recently developed approach based on the flow cytometric detection of haemozoin (Hz) allowed reagent-free monitoring of parasite maturation and detection of drug effects in culture-adapted parasites. In this study, the set-up, performance and usefulness of this novel assay were investigated under field conditions in Gabon.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25879757 PMCID: PMC4393616 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0657-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Flow cytometry modifications to detect light depolarization. The optical set-up of the Cyflow (Partec, Münster, Germany) (A) was easily modified to allow the detection of light depolarization. Four optical components from the original set-up (blue boxes in A) had to be replaced by the optical components shown in B, as described in the Methods section. Filters were simply replaced by unscrewing the original ones from the filter holder, or by removing the metallic ring (second row in B). This was accomplished using simple tools (bottom row in B). Note that in this case, polarization filters were glued inside the holder (arrows in B) so that they would not move, since to attain the best depolarization signal polarizers should be perpendicular to each other. The final optical layout to detect light depolarization is presented in C.
Figure 2Representative analysis of drug effects assessed after culture of blood samples from malaria patients. Representative plots of flow cytometric analysis of an uninfected blood sample (A) and a sample from a malaria patient with 1.5% parasitaemia (B). At time point 0 of incubation, no difference in depolarizing events is observed between the infected samples and the uninfected control (A and B). However, Hz is produced as the parasite matures, and after 24 hrs of incubation an increase in the percentage of depolarizing cells is detected (B) from 0.02 to 0.36. In this example, drug effects could be determined after only 24 hrs of incubation (C). Contrary to chloroquine, where resistance was observed, artesunate and artemisinin are still effective drugs (C).
Summarized data of isolates exhibiting different growth profiles analysed by the haemozoin assay
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| Growth profile | No maturation | Maturation at 24 hrs and replication at 48 hrs | Maturation at 24 hrs but no replication | Delayed maturation |
| Number of samples | 7 | 8 | 17 | 14 |
| Parasitaemia | 0.01%; | 0.3%; | 3.5%; | 0.3%; |
| (median; range) | 0.001-0.1% | 0.2-2.2% | 0.2-12% | 0.1-1.9% |
| IC50 Artesunate (mean) | nd | 10.5 nM | 15.2 nM | 5.6 nM |
| IC50 Artemisinin (mean) | nd | 46 nM | 47.3 nM | 14.4 nM |
nd – not determined.
IC50 – 50% inhibitory concentration.
Note: Results from chloroquine were not presented in this Table because the majority of the samples (32 out of 46) had IC50 values higher than 200 nM. Chloroquine had an inhibitory effect in only four samples from group 3 (IC50 mean = 76.8 nM). In ten samples, chloroquine activity could not be determined.
Figure 3Inhibitory 50% concentrations obtained for artesunate and artemisinin. Using the Hz detection assay, IC50 values for artesunate and artemisinin differed between samples ranging from 0.9 to 60 nM and from 2.2 nM to 124 nM, respectively. IC50 values obtained by the HRP-2 ELISA ranged from 0.6 to 31 nM for artesunate and from 0.6 to 94.8 nM for artemisinin.