| Literature DB >> 31659055 |
Sergey Kapishnikov1, Trine Staalsø2,3, Yang Yang6, Jiwoong Lee4, Ana J Pérez-Berná5, Eva Pereiro5, Yang Yang6, Stephan Werner7, Peter Guttmann7, Leslie Leiserowitz8, Jens Als-Nielsen9.
Abstract
The most widely used antimalarial drugs belong to the quinoline family. Their mode of action has not been characterized at the molecular level in vivo. We report the in vivo mode of action of a bromo analog of the drug chloroquine in rapidly frozen Plasmodium falciparum-infected red blood cells. The Plasmodium parasite digests hemoglobin, liberating the heme as a byproduct, toxic to the parasite. It is detoxified by crystallization into inert hemozoin within the parasitic digestive vacuole. By mapping such infected red blood cells with nondestructive X-ray microscopy, we observe that bromoquine caps hemozoin crystals. The measured crystal surface coverage is sufficient to inhibit further hemozoin crystal growth, thereby sabotaging heme detoxification. Moreover, we find that bromoquine accumulates in the digestive vacuole, reaching submillimolar concentration, 1,000-fold more than that of the drug in the culture medium. Such a dramatic increase in bromoquine concentration enhances the drug's efficiency in depriving heme from docking onto the hemozoin crystal surface. Based on direct observation of bromoquine distribution in the digestive vacuole and at its membrane surface, we deduce that the excess bromoquine forms a complex with the remaining heme deprived from crystallization. This complex is driven toward the digestive vacuole membrane, increasing the chances of membrane puncture and spillage of heme into the interior of the parasite.Entities:
Keywords: cryo X-ray microscopy; drug tracking; hemozoin; inhibition of crystallization; malaria
Year: 2019 PMID: 31659055 PMCID: PMC6859308 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1910123116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.(A) Bromoquine molecule, BrQ, where Br takes the place of chlorine of the original drug chloroquine (see for synthesis of BrQ). (B) Soft X-ray projection through parasite 1 along the same beam direction as in X-ray fluorescence maps shown in D and E. For parasite 1 the parasite membrane and the digestive vacuole (DV) are delineated by green and orange dots, respectively. Clusters of hemozoin (Hz) crystals are denoted by blue arrowheads. (C) Full segmentation of soft X-ray tomogram of the infected red blood cell (iRBC) labeled “C” with different compartments rendered in artificial colors. The 2 parasites that share the same red blood cell are colored green and blue and labeled parasite 1 and parasite 2, respectively. (D) X-ray fluorescence map of Fe in iRBC labeled “C” containing both parasites. Parasite 1 is delineated in accordance with the delineation in C. (E) X-ray fluorescence map of Br in the same infected red blood cell with parasite 1 delineated in the same way as in D. The similarity between the fluorescence maps of Fe and Br clearly demonstrates the affinity of BrQ molecules for attachment to the Hz crystals. The intensity scale factor I/I ∼ 272 (see main text) with an estimated uncertainty of 15%. The corresponding BrQ coverage is (7 ± 2)%.
Fig. 4.Surface rendering, measured and simulated X-ray fluorescence maps of a BrQ-treated infected red blood cell (iRBC) labeled A. (A) Surface rendering of a soft X-ray tomography segmentation. (B) Measured Fe X-ray fluorescence map. (C) Measured Br X-ray fluorescence map. (D) Simulated Br X-ray fluorescence map. Br atoms were evenly distributed over the surface of the digestive vacuole (DV) membrane, the parasite nucleus, and the parasite membrane with the density of 5 × 103 atoms per square micrometer, and on the surface of hemozoin (Hz) crystals with a density corresponding to 10% BrQ surface coverage. (E) Same simulation as D but without Br at the surface of Hz crystals.
Fig. 2.(A) Fe X-ray fluorescence map showing a cluster of Hz crystals grown in an infected red blood cell (iRBC) labeled E prior to introduction of the BrQ drug, as well as several free-floating Hz crystals labeled Hz1, Hz2, and so on outside the red blood cell. There is a weak (light bluish) Fe signal in the red blood cell originating from hemoglobin still not digested by the parasite. (B) Magnification of the Hz1 map showing Fe signal (Left) and bromine (Br) signal (Right). (C) The theoretical growth form of Hz crystals (18) emphasizing that the {100} and {010} are the prevailing faces. (D) Section through the Fe map shown in B, along the crystal needle axis (in orange) and transverse to it (in green).
Fig. 3.Overlap between Fe and Br distribution in BrQ-treated samples and BrQ-free samples. (A) Fe and Br X-ray fluorescence maps of an infected red blood cell (iRBC D) treated by BrQ. DV denotes the digestive vacuole and Hz the hemozoin crystals. (B) Fe and Br signals in a BrQ-free infected red blood cell (iRBC K).(C) Overlap parameter, O, between hemozoin position and Br fluorescence signal in 7 BrQ-treated and 9 BrQ-free samples. Each dot represents a measurement within an individual parasite carrying the name of its host iRBC. iRBCs named A through K are shown in ; others are labeled with a hash mark. iRBCs C and A are shown in Figs. 1 and 2, respectively. The overlap parameter = 0 if there is no overlap between Br and hemozoin and >0 if there is such an overlap.