Due to the striking similarities of the life cycle and biology of rodent malaria parasites to human malaria parasites, rodent malaria models have become indispensable for malaria research. Herein, we standardized some of the most important techniques used in the phenotypic analysis of wild-type and transgenic rodent malaria species.
Recent advances in genetics and systems biology technologies have promoted our understanding of the biology of malaria parasites on the molecular level. However, effective malaria parasite targets for vaccine and chemotherapy development are still limited. This is largely due to the unavailability of relevant and practical in vivo infection models for human Plasmodium species, most notably for P. falciparum and P. vivax. Therefore, rodent malaria species have been extensively used as practical alternative in vivo models for malaria vaccine, drug targeting, immune response, and functional characterization studies of conserved Plasmodiumspp. genes. Indeed, rodent malaria models have proven to be invaluable, especially for exploring mosquito transmission and liver stage biology, and were indispensable for immunological studies. However, there are discrepancies in the methods used to evaluate the phenotypes of transgenic and wild-type asexual and sexual blood-stage parasites. Examples of these discrepancies are the choice of an intravenous vs. intraperitoneal infection of rodents with blood-stage parasites and the evaluation of male gamete exflagellation. Herein, we detail standardized experimental methods to evaluate the phenotypes of asexual and sexual blood stages in transgenic parasites expressing reporter-gene or wild-type rodent malaria parasite species. We also detail the methods to evaluate the phenotypes of malaria parasite mosquito stages (gametes, ookinetes, oocysts, and sporozoites) inside Anopheles mosquito vectors. These methods are detailed and simplified here for the lethal and non-lethal strains of P. berghei and P. yoelii but can also be applied with some adjustments to P. chabaudi and P. vinckei rodent malaria species.
Malaria parasites cause hundreds of millions of malaria infections in humans worldwide, with more than 600,000 deaths every year1. Human infections are caused by five malaria parasite species, namely P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale, P. malariae, and P. knowlesi. Most clinical malaria mortalities are caused by P. falciparum in sub-Saharan Africa1. Another human malaria parasite species that causes extensive worldwide morbidities outside of sub-Saharan Africa is P. vivax2. The other three species are all more geographically restricted and cause benign malaria infections, except the lethal P. knowlesi3. The unavailability of relevant and practical non-human in vivo models of infections has always been and still is an obstacle to malaria vaccine and drug development. Earlier malaria drug targeting and metabolic studies have relied extensively on avian malaria models like P. gallinaceum and P. lophurae, infecting chickens and ducks, respectively4. Thereafter, rodent malaria species were gradually introduced in various vaccines and drug targeting studies as in vivo models. Over the years, evidence of similarities of the biology and host-parasite interactions of life cycle stages of rodent malaria models to human malaria species have accumulated.
In particular, rodent malaria models were extremely important to explore and characterize the biology of mosquito and pre-erythrocytic stages5. However, there are four rodent malaria species (P. berghei, P. yoelii, P. chabaudi, and P. vinckei) that have different biological features, the most notable of which are in the blood stages6. Rodent malaria species differ in the synchronicity of blood stages, where blood stages of P. chabaudi and P. vinckei strains are mostly synchronous, while the blood stages of P. berghei and P. yoelii are not6,7. Another notable difference is the self-clearance of blood stages that occurs in some strains (e.g., P. yoelii 17X-NL, P. berghei NK65, and P. vinckei lentum), whereas the blood infection of other strains of the same species could be lethal if left untreated (P. yoelii 17X-L, P. berghei ANKA, and P. chabaudi AS). Moreover, P. yoelii 17X-NL strain and P. berghei ANKA strain preferentially invade reticulocytes8,9,10,11, although these features of P. yoelii and P. berghei strains are not a strict growth requirement12,13,14. Therefore, mice are treated with phenylhydrazine prior to an infection with the blood stages of those parasites to increase the parasitemia and gametocytemia needed for a mosquito infection for the P. berghei ANKA strain and for P. yoelii 17X-NL15,16,17,18,19.
Differences in mosquito stages development also exist among different rodent malaria species, the most notable being the temperature and time required for optimal mosquito stages development and the sporozoite length5,6,20.In pre-erythrocytic stages of rodent malaria species, differences include the rodent species and strain that are most susceptible to infectious sporozoite inoculation, the number of sporozoites needed for inoculation in a susceptible rodent strain, the mammalian cell types needed for in vitro liver stage development assays, and the time to complete liver stage development5,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30.
Despite these variabilities, rodent malaria parasites were the favorable models early on for the application of reverse genetic approaches, because they were less time- and resource-consuming with a high probability of success31. In fact, rodent malaria models were the best models, and in many instances the only models, available for numerous years to functionally characterize genes expressed in mosquito and liver stages.
In light of the popularity and amenability of reverse genetic approaches in rodent malaria models, a number of different methodologies have been utilized to analyze the phenotypes of transgenic parasite life cycle stages, especially blood stages. However, some of these methodologies are inconsistent; for instance, comparing infections of blood-stage parasites following an IP injection (which are possibly drained to the peritoneal lymph nodes and, from there, can enter the bloodstream; therefore, the injected parasites do not end up equally in the bloodstream), comparing the mosquito transmission of clones with a different number of serial blood-stage transfers or G number (which could affect gametocytogenesis32,33), or comparing transgenic parasites directly to naive wild-type (WT) parasites that were never subjected to electroporation and positive drug selection and the various unstandardized evaluations of male gamete exflagellation. Therefore, it is crucial to standardize protocols that are simple to follow for the phenotypic analysis of any type of transgenic or WT rodent malaria parasites in the blood and in the mosquito to accommodate for the biological variabilities of rodent malaria parasite species.
Herein, we report on a standardized, detailed experimental protocol for the phenotypic analysis of the blood and mosquito life cycle stages of transgenic or wild-type P. yoelii and P. berghei parasites. These protocols are also applicable to P. chabaudi and P. vinckei parasites.
All animal experiments described here were conducted according to the approved protocols of the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of Tulane University and the animals ethics committee of Bezmialem Vakif University. All other experimental protocols and the use of recombinant DNA were conducted according to the approved protocols of the Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC) of Tulane University.
1. Infection of Mice with Blood-stage Parasites for Parasitemia Analysis and Mosquito Infection Assays
2. Determination of the Blood-stage Parasite Load for Sexual and Asexual Stages
NOTE: In this section, standardized phenotypic evaluation methods of malaria parasite blood stages are listed. These methods are useful in the evaluation of novel antimalarial or vaccine candidates or even gene knockout on sexual and asexual stages development in the same experimental mice. Of note, P. chabaudi and P. vinckei are also very rational and important alternative options for these types of assays, especially in drug screening.
3. Isolation and Processing of Blood-stage Parasites from Infected Erythrocytes and Frozen Stock Preparation
4. Mosquito Infection Assays
NOTE: The mosquito is the primary host of the malaria parasites where sexual reproduction takes place. The infection of mice to transmit malaria parasites to mosquitoes is conducted by an IV injection of at least 1 million blood stages, followed by feeding an infected mouse (from each genotype that displays the highest male gamete exflagellation rate) to Anopheles mosquitoes in a cage at day 3 post-mouse-infection. The IV injection with 1 million blood-stage parasites in phenylhydrazine-treated mice will ensure the development of male and female gametocyte at a faster and higher rate. Mosquitoes infected with P. yoelii and P. berghei are incubated at 24 °C and 20-21 °C, respectively, to allow for the best possible mosquito stages development6.
The success of applying reverse genetic tools and techniques to malaria parasites has revolutionized the field of malaria research, with the ability to add, delete, or modify specific genomic segments of several Plasmodium species39. Importantly, dispensable genomic loci have been identified and used successfully to introduce fluorescence protein markers in rodent and human malaria parasites by double homologous recombination, to ensure a stable expression in all life cycle stages40,41,42. An example of these WT-like transgenic parasites is Py230p(-) parasites, which have been generated in our lab, and showed no apparent defect in the development of blood and mosquito life cycle stages15,16,17. These transgenic reporter parasites expressed eGFP, under the control of the strong and constitutive promoter of PyHSP70, in blood stages (Figure 1A) ookinetes (Figure 1B), young oocysts (Figure 1C) on Anopheles stephensi midguts, and in sporozoites isolated from the salivary glands of Anopheles stephensi females (Figure 1D). Thus, the eGFP-expressing blood parasites made it much easier and less time-consuming to evaluate blood-stage parasitemia using flow cytometry between different genotypes of transgenic parasites or between drug-treated and -untreated in drug-targeting assays using transgenic reporter parasites.
In order to confirm that there is no quantitative difference between the use of flow cytometry and the more tedious parasitemia estimation by microscopy, the eGFP-expressing Pyp230p(-) was used to estimate the percentage of parasitized erythrocytes by flow cytometry and by Giemsa-stained thin blood smear in a group of Swiss Webster mice IV-infected with 10,000 parasitized erythrocytes. The flow cytometry parasitemia% values corresponded directly to the estimated parasitemia% by monitoring Giemsa-stained thin blood smears, which were estimated by two expert scientists (Figure 2). This represents a more accurate alternative to the tedious and prone-to-human-error method of microscopy in the determination of the growth rate of blood-stage parasites.
An important discrepancy associated with the infection of rodents with malaria parasites blood stages is the choice of route of infection, with a strong preference in the literature for the IP compared to IV route of infection, as it is less time-consuming. In order to compare these two routes of infection, two groups of five BALB/c mice were infected with 1,000 eGFP-expressing Pyp230p(-) parasitized erythrocytes per mouse, either through IV or IP routes. The parasitemia was monitored daily using flow cytometry for a period of 4 days. A statistically significant decrease in the IP-infected group parasitemia% compared to the IV-infected group was noted on all days tested (Figure 3). This provides evidence that the IV infection route is a more quantitatively accurate route of infection for assays with the malaria parasite blood stages.
Nonetheless, one limitation to the use of flow cytometry to evaluate blood-stage parasitemia is the differentiation between sexual and asexual stages and between male and female gametocytes. Therefore, the estimation of the percentages of each of the different asexual and sexual stages (Figure 4) has to depend on a morphology evaluation of Giemsa-stained thin blood smear. Despite the apparent different morphology of mature male and female gametocytes (Figure 4), immature sexual stages are often indistinguishable from asexual stages.
One essential function of the male gametes upon emergence from male gametocyte in the mosquito midgut is the male gamete exflagellation, which is a very critical step in the transmission that must happen within a very short period of time. Variable methods used to evaluate this in many different systems have been described. Herein, we show a standardized method that can be repeated in any simple lab setting. We evaluated male gamete exflagellation with or without the injection of phenylhydrazine into recipient mice (Figure 5). We could show that the phenylhydrazine treatment significantly (four fold) increased the rate of male gamete exflagellation, which in turn will increase the fertilization rate and the number of all subsequent mosquito stages.
Figure 1: The development of P. yoelii p230p(-) parasites constitutively expressing eGFP in blood and mosquito stages. (A) Image of mixed blood-stage parasites (1,000X magnification). (B) Image of ookinete (400X magnification). (C) Image of an Anopheles stephensi mosquito midgut infected with day 4 pmf early oocysts of live p230p(-) parasites expressing eGFP (100X magnification). (D) This panel shows a live image of a P. yoelii p230p(-) salivary gland sporozoite, dissected out at day 15 pmf, expressing eGFP (400X magnification). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Flow cytometry and microscopy evaluations of average blood-stage parasitemia of P. yoelii p230p(-) parasites are not significantly different. A group of four Swiss Webster mice was intravenously infected with 10,000 parasitized erythrocytes of Pyp230p(-) per mouse and the average blood-stage parasitemias% were recorded daily for 7 days by flow cytometry and by the microscopic evaluation of Giemsa-stained thin blood smears from a total of 20,000 and ~6,000 erythrocytes, respectively. The microscopic examination results shown are the average of two readings by two expert scientists per slide, and the time for evaluating the parasitemia of each slide was at least 10 minutes by each scientist. No significant differences could be detected on any of the days shown here. The mean values for all parasite strains were analyzed with the two-tailed t-test. The error bars represent the standard deviation. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: An intravenous injection of P. yoelii p230p(-) parasites yields significantly different blood-stage parasitemia from an intraperitoneal injection. Two groups of five BALB/c mice were infected with 1,000 parasitized erythrocytes of Pyp230p(-) per mouse, either through the intravenous or intraperitoneal route, and the average blood-stage parasitemias% were recorded daily for 4 days by flow cytometry from a total of 20,000 erythrocytes. A statistically significant reduction (denoted by an asterisk) of blood-stage parasitemia could be detected for all days tested in the intraperitoneal route group compared to the intravenous route group. The mean values for all parasite strains were analyzed with the two-tailed t-test. The error bars represent the standard deviation. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Morphology of P. yoelii gametocytes in a Giemsa-stained thin blood smear. An image of a Giemsa-stained thin blood smear (1,000X magnification) of a Swiss Webster mouse infected with WT P. yoelii 17X-NL strain shows the typical blueish colored female gametocyte on the left side (denoted by an arrow) and the pinkish colored male (denoted by an asterisk) gametocyte on the right side of the image. The other stages shown are asexual blood stages. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: The effect of phenylhydrazine on male gamete exflagellation. The effect of phenylhydrazine injected in recipient mice 5 days prior to the male gamete exflagellation rate estimation of P. yoelii. Phenylhydrazine significantly increases the rate of male gamete exflagellation, which leads to a higher mosquito stages infection post-mosquito-feeding. The mean values for all parasite strains were analyzed with the two-tailed t-test. The error bars represent the standard deviation. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
In spite of the similarity in the general biology of their life cycles to that of human malaria parasites, mouse malaria models also have many dissimilarities to human Plasmodium species that would limit their use as reliable in vivo models. For instance, with the exception of live-attenuated parasites as vaccines, all vaccine studies with subunit and DNA and other vaccines gave excellent results in the mouse model, but in humans living in endemic areas, the results were far from satisfactory.
Another problem is the difference of life cycle stage infectivity from one mouse strain to another, and sometimes from one animal vendor to another for the same mouse strain. Moreover, the main two rodent malaria species that are widely used as preferred in vivo malaria models, P. berghei and P. yoelii, do not exhibit a synchronous blood-stage cycle, which is completely different from any human malaria parasite. However, the benefits of using mouse malaria parasites as in vivo models outweigh by far these dissimilarities, which can be also overcome by more in-depth analyses of the molecular drives of these limitations. Nevertheless, these limitations are mostly displayed by the rodent malaria blood-stage parasites, but not as much for the other life cycle stages of the malaria parasite.
Although blood stages are important for various vaccine, drug targeting, immunology, and functional genomic studies, there is a scarcity of standardized methods and protocols that concentrate on the phenotypical analysis and functional assays that involve rodent malaria parasite blood-stage parasites, with more focus on mosquito transmission and transfection protocols. Therefore, the methods in this article will help to provide standardized and simplified protocols for studying the pathogenic stages of the rodent malaria parasites.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Ahmed Aly is supported by funding to Bezmialem Vakif University from the Turkish Ministry of Development grant 2015BSV036, and by funding provided by the Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, and by funding from NIH-NIAID for R21Grant 1R21AI111058-01A1.
Heparin | Sigma | 375095-100KU | |
Xanthurenic acid | Sigma | D120804-5G | |
Hypoxanthine | Sigma | H9377-25G | |
Alsever's solution | Sigma | A3551-500ML | |
Sodium Bicarbonate | Sigma | S5761-500G | |
Phenylhydrazine | Sigma | P26252-5G | |
Glycerol | Sigma | G5516-500ML | |
Giemsa | Sigma | GS1L-1L | |
26G x 3/8 Precision Glide Needle, | Becton Dickinson | 305110 | |
1 ml TB Syringe, 26G x 3/8 | Becton Dickinson | 309625 | |
1 cc Insulin Syringe, U-100 27G | Becton Dickinson | 329412 | |
Isoflurane, USB | Piramal | 2667- 46- 7 | |
PBS, pH 7.4 | Gibco | 10010049 | |
RPMI | Gibco | 22400105 | |
DMEM | Gibco | 11995065 | |
Pencillin/ Streptomycin | Gibco | 10378016 | |
Fetal Bovine Serum | Gibco | 10082147 | |
Fiber Glass Wool | Corning | 3950 |