| Literature DB >> 27895916 |
Emmanuel Mouafo Tekwu1, William Kofi Anyan2, Daniel Boamah3, Kofi Owusu Baffour-Awuah2, Stephanie Keyetat Tekwu4, Veronique Penlap Beng5, Alexander Kwadwo Nyarko6, Kwabena Mante Bosompem2.
Abstract
It is crucial to develop new antischistosomal drugs since there is no vaccine and the whole world is relying on only a single drug for the treatment of schistosomiasis. One of the obstacles to the development of drugs is the absence of the high throughput objective screening methods to assess drug compounds efficacy. Thus for identification of new drug compounds candidates, fast and accurate in vitro assays are unavoidable and more research efforts in the field of drug discovery can target schistosomula. This review presents a substantial overview of the present state of in vitro drug sensitivity assays developed so far for the determination of anti-schistosomula activity of drug compounds, natural products and derivatives using newly transformed schistosomula (NTS). It highlights some of the challenges involved in in vitro compound screening using NTS and the way forward.Entities:
Keywords: Drug discovery; In vitro drug sensitivity; Mechanical transformation; Newly Transformed Schistosomula; Schistosomiasis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27895916 PMCID: PMC5120492 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-016-0075-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Fig. 1Life cycle of Schistosoma (Source: [22])
Fig. 2Flowchart of Newly Transformed Schistosomula (NTS) Procedure
Advantages and disadvantages of different ways for preparing schistosomula
| Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanical methods (Centrifugation, Syringe needle method, Vortexing) | Relatively easy and Inexpensive | Increased parasite damage |
| Manipulation of thousands of cercariae | Increased risk of infection to researchers (Potential biohazard to the researcher) | |
| Replaces the use of live animals | ||
| Help to obtain large number of schistosomula | ||
| Morphological characteristics identical to schistosmula obtained naturally | Only 25–50% of transformed schistosomula reach the ‘gut-closed’ stage by day 12 | |
| Non-mechanical methods (Chemical transformation & Excised skin penetration) | Ideal alternative to obtaining high numbers of viable schistosomula | Significantly less cercariae heads separated from the tails by chemical method |
| Simpler | Low schistosomula yield and the possibility of contamination by host material | |
| 50–70% of skin transformed schistosomula reach the ‘gut-closed’ stage by day 12 | Require use of live animals (rat, mice, hamster, …) and skilled technician | |
| Schistosmula are obtained naturally | Less appropriate technique for high throughput |
Fig. 3Survival time of S. haematobium NTS in different culture media (Source: [26])
Effects of different culture media on the growth of schistosomula
| Culture Media | Shape and appearance of NTS | Motility of NTS | Duration/Viability of NTS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basch Medium 169 | Parasites (NTS) appear robust and uniform | High dynamic motility | Keeps parasites alive up to one week’s incubation. |
| DMEM | Parasites (NTS) appear distorted including rounding and darkening | Slowed and less dynamic motility | Keeps parasites alive up to 144 h |
| Medium 199 | Generate different degrees of distorted parasites (NTS) including rounding and darkening | Slowed and less dynamic motility | Supplemented Medium 199 keeps the parasites alive up to 120 h with an average viability value of about 2.5 |
| RPMI 1640 | Parasites (NTS) rounding | Slowed and less dynamic motility | Parasites degeneration and average death of 40 to 60% within 3 days with continued mortality up to two weeks |
NTS newly transformed schistosomula, DMEM Dulbecco’s modified eagle’s medium, RPMI Roswell Park Memorial Institute
In vitro drug sensitivity assays developed for the determination of anti-schistosomula activity of drug compounds
| Methods | Principles | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Microscope readouts without staining | Parasites are manipulated in vitro and the effect is assessed by bright field examination of morphology. | - Used to discriminate between live and dead schistosomula after incubation | - The personnel should be well trained to distinguish diverse schistosomula phenotypes |
| Microscope readouts with Staining using a single fluorescent dye | Parasites are manipulated in vitro and the effect is assessed by bright field examination of viable or dead cells | - Used to discriminate between live and dead schistosomula after incubation | - Cannot be used for earlier time-points |
| Microscope readouts with Staining using dual fluorescent viability assay | Combination of the use of DNA intercalating dyes (ethidium bromide (EB), Propidium Iodide (PI)) with Carboxyfluorescein (fluorescein diacetate), Resazurin to easily assess the percentage of viable schistosomula present in a sample | - This bioassay was developed for 96 or 384 well microtiter plate optically clear | - The ability of the dual fluorescent dye to provide significant phenotypic data is slightly limited |
| Motility assay | The assay uses the xCELLigence system for monitoring cells in a real-time manner. This technique is based on the detection of changing electrical currents running through mini gold electrodes incorporated into the bottom of tissue culture plates | - Simply and objectively assess anthelmintic effects by measuring parasite motility in real time in a fully automated high-throughput fashion | - The xCELLigence equipment used in this technology is costly and may restrict its applicability |
| Fluorometric L-lactate assay | Consist of the measurement of lactate levels that reflect clearly the viability of schistosomula and this also correlate with schistosomula numbers | - Can be used as simple surrogate marker | - This technique requires that the supernatant must be removed from the drug assay without aspirating the schistosomula and the drug assay should be diluted to an acceptable fluorescence range as needed. These make the fluorometric L-lactate assay less than high-throughput |
| CellTiterGlo® (Commercial luminescence-based cell viability kit) | Detection of schistosomula viability through quantitation of ATP | - Suitable for a Medium-Throughput Assay semi-automated for drug screening | - Require a precise multi-drop dispenser to ensure an exact number of NTS present in each well |
Summary of the published studies
| Objective | Media used | NTS procedure | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mansour et al. (2016) screened almost 300,000 compounds using an assay based on motility of worm, larvae and image analysis of assay plates | M169 supplemented with 100 U/ml Penicillin, 300 μg/ml Streptomycin, 0.25 μg/ml Fungizone (Amphotericin B) and 5 % fetal calf serum (FCS) | Mechanical transformation using the Syringe needle Method | A number of compounds were identified as promising leads for further chemical optimization | [ |
| Panic et al. (2015a) investigate a panel of fluorescence/luminescence dyes for their applicability as viability markers in drug sensitivity assays for | Medium 199 supplemented with 5 % heat iFCS and 1 % penicillin-streptomycin mixture | Mechanical in vitro transformation (vortexing) | Of the 11 markers selected for testing, resazurin, Vybrant® and CellTiter-Glo® correlated best with NTS viability, produced signals ≥ 3-fold stronger than background noise and revealed a significant signal-to-NTS concentration relationship | [ |
| Panic et al. (2015b) expands the knowledge of antischistosomal properties of already approved 1600 FDA compounds from a very diverse set of indications against | Medium 199 supplemented with 5 % heat iFCS and 1 % penicillin/streptomycin | Mechanical in vitro transformation (vortexing) | Of the 1600 compounds screened against schistosomula, 121 were identified as active and 36 of these were active on the adult worms after Screening. The two in vivo- moderately active drugs identified in this study, doramectin and clofazimine present as novel drug classes as starting points for further investigation | [ |
| Lalli et al. (2015) describes the development and validation of a luminescence based, medium-throughput assay for the detection of schistosomula viability through quantitation of ATP | DMEM complete tissue culture medium | Mechanical in vitro transformation (vortexing) | Schistosomula viability luminescence based assay is successful and suitable for the identification of novel compounds potentially exploitable in future schistosomiasis therapies | [ |
| Howe et al. (2015) assessed lactate as a surrogate marker for viability in | Phenol-red free medium 199 | Mechanically transformed by vortexing | Lactate levels clearly reflected the viability of schistosomula and correlated with schistosomulum numbers. Lactate is a sensitive and simple surrogate marker to be measured to determine | [ |
| Ingram-Sieber et al.(2014) investigated the Medicines for Malaria Venture malaria box containing 200 diverse drug-like and 200 probe-like compounds with known antimalarial activity against larval stage of | Supplemented Medium 199 with 5 % heat iFCS, penicillin (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 μg/ml) | Mechanically transformation by vortexing | Underlined the potential of compounds with an antimalarial background on schistosomes. Two entirely new chemical scaffolds with antischistosomal in vitro activity in the sub micromolar range and moderate in vivo activity identified | [ |
| Protasio et al. (2013) analyzed differences in gene expression patterns between Mechanical and Skin Transformed | Supplemented DMEM, 10 % FCS, 1 % Hepes buffer with 100 U/L penicillin, 0.1 mg/L streptomycin and 10 mM L-glutamine | - Mechanical transformation using the 21G Syringe needle method | This work contributes to the validation of gene expression studies that have used Mechanical transformed schistosomula and provides further evidence that the MT is a good proxy for natural skin transformation | [ |
| Coultas et al. (2012) compared a current and widely used double-ended-needle mechanical transformation method to a culture medium based on a nonmechanical method | RPMI 1640 medium enriched with L-glutamine; 150 units/ml penicillin, 100 μg/ml streptomycin and 5 % heat inactivated fetal bovine serum (iFBS) | Mechanical transformation using the 22-gauge double-ended, luer lok emulsifying needle | The mechanical and nonmechanical cercariae transformation methods both yielded significantly large and similar quantities of viable schistosomula | [ |
| de Moraes et al. (2012) report the in vitro antischistosomal activity of piplartine on | Basch 169 medium containing antibiotics and supplemented with 10 % fetal bovine serum (FBS) | Mechanical transformation, using a Vortex mixer | This report provides the first evidence that piplartine is able to kill schistosomula of different ages and reinforce that piplartine is a promising compound that could be used for the development of new schistosomicidal agent | [ |
| Marxer et al. (2012) developed an in vitro drug screening assay for | Basch Medium 169, DMEM and Medium 199. All supplemented with 5 % heat iFCS and 200 U/ml penicillin and 200 μg/ml streptomycin | Mechanical transformation, using a Vortex mixer and chemical transformation using glucose | A circadian rhythm existed in both snail species. The highest transformation rate of | [ |
| Ingram et al. (2012) tested mefloquine-related compounds belonging to the three major groups of arylmethanols in order to elucidate their potential as antischistosomal lead candidates. The selected arylmethanols were tested against | Medium 199 supplemented with 5 % heat iFCS, penicillin (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 μg/ml) | Mechanically transformation by vortexing | The study confirmed the high antischistosomal activity of compounds with a mefloquine scaffold. Four candidates, WR7930, its two derivatives, and enpiroline, that are characterized by high antischistosomal properties in vivo were identified | [ |
| Milligan et al. (2011) provide a visual description of cercarial transformation and in vitro culturing of schistosomules | RPMI 1640 supplemented with 5 % FBS, 1X Penicillin/Streptomycin | Mechanical transformation using the 22-gauge double-ended, luer lok emulsifying needle | This study developed a visual protocols for in vitro cercarial transformation and schistosomules culture techniques | [ |
| Smout et al. (2010) describe a novel application for a real-time cell monitoring device (xCELLigence) that can simply and objectively assess anthelmintic effects by measuring parasite motility in real time in a fully automated high-throughput fashion | RPMI 1640, 1 % antibiotic/antimycotic and 10 mM Hepes | - | The study reported that the technique can be suitable for discovery and development of new anthelmintic drugs as well as for detection of phenotypic resistance to existing drugs for the majority of helminths and other pathogens where motility is a measure of pathogen viability | [ |
| Mansour et al.(2010) report the development and validation of the Alamar Blue assay compared with morphology-based (microscopic) assessment of compound activity | M169 supplemented with 100 U/ml Penicillin, 100 mg/ml Streptomycin and 5 % FCS | Mechanical transformation using the Syringe Method | The Alamar Blue assay is readily able to detect compounds causing death or severe damage to the larvae but is less reliable than microscopy for more subtle morphological changes. It is concluded that an automated high throughput screen would benefit from integrated use of both alamar blue and automatic image-based morphology assays | [ |
| Manneck et al.(2010) studied the temporal effect of this Mefloquine in vitro and in vivo, and examined alterations on the tegumental surface of schistosomula and adults of S. mansoni by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) | Basch medium 169 supplemented with 5 % heat iFCS and 100 U/ml penicillin and 100 mg/ml streptomycin | Mechanically transformation by vortexing | Mefloquine induces extensive morphological and tegumental alterations on both | [ |
| Peak et al. (2010) presented a microtiter plate-based method for reproducibly detecting schistosomula viability that takes advantage of the differential uptake of fluorophores (propidium iodide and fluorescein diacetate) by living organisms | DMEM lacking phenol red, containing 4500 mg/l glucose, supplemented with 10 % FCS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 200 U/ml penicillin, 200 mg/ml streptomycin | Mechanically transformation by vortexing | The study showed that developed method is sensitive (200 schistosomula/well can be assayed), relevant to industrial (384-well microtiter plate compatibility) and academic (96-well microtiter plate compatibility) settings, translatable to functional genomics screens and drug assays | [ |
| Abdulla et al. (2009) presented a partially automated, three component phenotypic screen workflow that utilizes at its apex the schistosomula stage of the parasite adapted to a 96-well plate format. | Basch Medium 169 | Mechanical transformation using the 22-gauge double-ended, luer lok emulsifying needle | The study has identified various compounds and drugs as hits in vitro and leads, with the prescribed oral efficacy, in vivo | [ |
NTS newly transformed schistosomula, DMEM Dulbecco’s modified eagle’s medium, RPMI Roswell Park Memorial Institute, iFCS heat inactivated fetal calf serum, SEM scanning electron microscopy