Generation of an In Vitro Cell Culture Model of Malaria-HIV Co-Infection

Published: October 31, 2023

Abstract

Source: Finney, C. et al., An In Vitro Model for Measuring Immune Responses to Malaria in the Context of HIV Co-infection. J. Vis. Exp. (2015)

This video demonstrates the generation of an in vitro malaria-HIV co-infection cell culture model. HIV-infected peripheral blood mononuclear cells co-cultured with Plasmodium falciparum parasitized erythrocytes potentially support each other's growth and provide insights into the immune responses and disease progression in HIV and malaria co-infections.

Protocol

All procedures involving sample collection have been performed in accordance with the institute's IRB guidelines.

CAUTION: Working with human blood samples and human malaria parasites requires precautionary measures. Always wear a lab coat, and gloves, and work in a level 2 Biosafety cabinet. In the event of accidental percutaneous exposure to human malaria, report to Health and Safety for prophylactic treatment. Additional safety considerations should also be put in place for working with human immunodeficiency virus HIV(+) blood. Wear a back-closing lab coat. Double glove (top glove should be latex). Perform all handling in a level 2 Biosafety cabinet. Do not use any glass or sharp objects. Do not use an aspirator. Place all contaminated items in virox solution or bleach for a minimum of 1 hr prior to discarding. Wash all surfaces with virox and ultraviolet (UV) for 1 hr following use. Note that each institution will have its own specific biosafety regulations that need to be followed. Report all accidental exposures to HIV-infected blood to Health and Safety for evaluation and consideration of possible post-exposure prophylaxis.

Note: Different strains of P. falciparum malaria parasites exist. ITG was used for these experiments, but different strains can be used. Excellent instructions on freezing and thawing Plasmodium falciparum parasites are available at the MR4 website.

1. Making RPMI-A for Malaria Parasite Culture

  1. Make RPMI-0 by mixing 950 ml of double-distilled water (ddH2O), 1 packet of Roswell Park Memorial Institute (RPMI)-1640 powder, 6 g of N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethane sulfonic acid (HEPES), 2 g of sodium bicarbonate, and 1.35 mg of hypoxanthine.
  2. Thaw heat-inactivated human serum from two different donors. AB donors are best but any can be used if parasites are grown in O-type red blood cells (RBC). Invert tubes to mix. If the serum contains particulate matter or is thick spin at 2,000 rpm and then filter the liquid portion using a 0.45 µm filter unit.
  3. Using a 0.2 µm filter unit filter 180 ml of RPMI-0, 20 ml of human serum (10 ml from each donor), and 0.5 ml of 10 mg/ml gentamycin.         
    Note: Human serum can clog the filter so more than one filter unit may be required.
  4. Label the medium bottle with RPMI-A, the date, and the source of the serum. Refrigerate until required. RPMI-A may turn cloudy when refrigerated. This is normal, but increasing cloudiness is a sign of contamination.       
    Note: Parasite growth may vary in different donor serums. It is a good idea to test all human serum batches for good parasite growth before using.

2. Preparing Human Red Blood Cells for Parasite Culture

Note: Blood donors should be type O.

  1. Collect 7-10 ml of blood into acid-citrate-dextrose (ACD) tubes. Write the donor's ID and date of collection on the label.
  2. Store blood at 4 oC until needed. Use blood for parasite cultures within 1 month.
  3. Wipe the top of the tube with 70% ethanol. Carefully remove the stopper and discard it. Transfer blood into a 15 ml tube. Spin for 3 min at 1,000 x g. Remove plasma by aspiration.
  4. Suspend RBC with an equal volume of warm RPMI-0. Spin for 5 min at 1,000 x g. Remove the buffy coat by aspiration, resuspend in 5 ml of RPMI-0, and repeat the wash 2 more times.
  5. Remove the supernatant and add enough RPMI-A to produce a mixture that is 50% RBC by volume.
  6. Store at 4 oC until needed.

3. Maintaining Parasite Cultures

  1. Pre-warm RPMI-A to 37 oC.
  2. Place thawed parasites (see MR4 protocol for thawing procedure) into a T25 flask with 5 ml of RPMI-A and 75 μl of washed human RBC for a hematocrit of ~3%. Note: Hematocrit measures the volume of RBC compared to the total volume. To calculate hematocrit measure the volume of packed RBC to the total volume of medium plus RBC. Assume that the thawed parasites will contribute 75 μl of RBC. By adding 150 μl of RBC stock (which is equivalent to adding 75 μl of packed RBC) to the flask there is a total of 150 μl of RBC into 5 ml of medium, which equals a hematocrit of 3% (150 μl/5,000 μl x 100% = 3%).
  3. Gas the flask for 30 sec with parasite gas mixture (1% O2, 3% CO2, balance N2). Seal and place the flask wide side down in a 37 oC incubator as to allow for the greatest surface area for gas exchange.
  4. To change the medium and check for parasitemia (needs to be done daily), carefully move the flask so as to not disturb the RBC layer. Using a sterile unplugged Pasteur pipette draw off the culture medium without disturbing the blood layer.
  5. To check parasitemia, remove a 10 μl sample from the blood layer, place it on a glass slide, and using a second glass slide create a thin blood film. Allow the slide to dry.
  6. Place 4 ml of fresh RPMI-A into the flask, gently mix, gas for 30 sec, and place in an incubator at 37 °C.
  7. Stain the slide using the Hema3 staining kit according to the manufacturer's protocol.
    1. For optimal staining, dip slides in the fixing solution for 10 sec, solution I for 10 sec, and solution II for 30 sec. Rinse in water and leave slides to dry.
  8. Calculate parasitemia by counting the number of Plasmodium falciparum RBC, PfRBC (stained dark purple) versus the total number of RBC (stained pink). Count a total of 300 cells to ensure accuracy.
  9. When parasites have reached a parasitemia of 5%, expand the culture into a T75 flask, using 40 ml of RPMI-A, and 500 μl of RBC.

4. Parasite Synchronization

Note: The day before the experiment, synchronize the parasite culture by treating it with alanine. Only ring-stage parasites and uninfected RBCs will survive this treatment. Alanine synchronization will give you a pure trophozoite culture the next day that can be used in the co-culture experiments. Make sure to start with a parasite culture that contains a majority of ring-stage parasites.

  1. Prepare alanine solution by mixing 8.01 g of alanine (300 mM) and 0.365 g of Tris (10 mM) into 300 ml of ddH2O. Bring pH to 7.4. Filter sterilize using a 0.2 μm filter unit.
  2. Pre-warm the alanine solution to 37 oC.
  3. Spin down the parasite culture (5 min x 1,000 x g), and remove the medium.
  4. Resuspend pellet in 19 volumes of alanine solution (1 ml packed RBC to 19 ml alanine solution). Incubate for 15 minutes at room temperature (RT).
  5. Spin 5 min x 1,000 x g. Aspirate supernatant. Wash in RPMI-0 once. Aspirate supernatant and resuspend in RPMI-A and adjust hematocrit to ~3%. Gas flask and return to 37 oC.      
    Note: For co-culture experiments, a minimum parasitemia of 5% trophozoites is needed, with 10% parasitemia considered optimal.

5. Parasite and RBC Preparation for Co-culture Experiments

  1. Use a ratio of 3 PfRBC per PBMC in co-culture experiments to induce an inflammatory response. To calculate total PfRBC, quantify parasitemia by making a thin blood smear as described in 3.5, and hematocrit by counting the number of RBCs per mL of parasite culture using a hemocytometer.   
    Number of PfRBC = % parasitemia x total RBC/ml x ml of culture. For example, 10 ml of culture at 10 x 106 RBC/ml and 10% parasitemia is equal to 0.1 x 106/ml x 10 ml = 10 x 10PfRBC.
  2. Spin the parasite culture for 5 min at 1,000 x g (RT). Aspirate medium, and resuspend at 6 x 106 PfRBC per ml in RPMI-S+ (500 ml RPMI-1640 supplemented with L-glutamine and HEPES, 10% heat inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS), 1.5 ml gentamicin, 5 ml of 100 mM sodium pyruvate, 5 ml of 10 mM MEM non-essential amino acids, 5 ml of 5mM β-mercaptoethanol).
  3. Take control blood (uninfected RBC from the same donor used for maintaining the parasite culture), calculate hematocrit, and resuspend in RPMI-S+ at the same number of RBC per ml as the parasite culture.

6. Isolation of Human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC)

  1. Collect venous blood in sodium heparin tubes (green top) from both a chronic HIV(+) donor and an HIV(-) control. Do not use Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) as an anti-coagulant as EDTA's calcium-chelating action affects cell function. On average expect between 5-10 x 106 PBMC per 10 ml of blood. For a typical experiment collect 30 ml of blood from each donor. The blood volume will need to be adjusted according to the experimental requirements.
  2. As quickly as possible and definitely within an hour of blood being collected, remove the blood from the tubes and place it into a plastic 50 ml tube. Monocytes in particular will be activated and stick to glass, so it is important that if glass blood collection tubes are used cells are removed as quickly as possible.
  3. Spin the blood at 1,000 x g for 15 min and collect plasma (this can be used for other studies if required – if not this step can be skipped). Dilute the blood in an equal volume of cold Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline (DPBS).
  4. Place 15 ml of RT Ficoll into a 50 ml tube. Slowly, using a sterile plastic transfer pipette, layer the blood/DPBS solution over the Ficoll without any mixing. A maximum of 25 ml of blood/DPBS solution can be layered over each 15 ml of Ficoll.
  5. Spin the gradients for 30 min at RT at 600 x g. Make sure the 'no brake' setting is on.
  6. Once the cells have spun, look for the interface between the two phases. This is where the PBMCs are. Using a sterile plastic transfer pipette collect the PBMC from the interface (see Figure 1). Minimize contamination by RBC.
  7. Place collected cells in 50 ml tubes, with no more than 20 ml per tube. Top tube up to 50 ml with sterile cold DPBS.
  8. Spin the cells for 10 min at 4 oC at 300 x g.
  9. Discard supernatant, resuspend pellet in 5 ml sterile cold DPBS, and pool all cells from the same donor into one tube. Top up to 50 ml with sterile DPBS, and repeat the wash steps 2 more times.
  10. Resuspend cells in 10 ml RPMI-S+ medium.
  11. Remove a 20 μl aliquot and mix with 20 μl of trypan blue. Pipette 10 μl in a hemocytometer and count the living cells (cells that have not taken up the blue dye – all blue cells are dead). Use a hemocytometer to calculate cell number in a solution as follows.   
    Note: A hemocytometer has a grid of specified dimensions so that the area covered by the lines is known.
    1. Make sure the hemocytometer is clean. Place the coverslip over the counting area. Load 10 μl of cell solution by placing the pipette tip into one of the V-shaped wells. The area under the coverslip will be filled by capillary action.
    2. Place the loaded hemocytometer under a microscope. The full grid of the hemocytometer contains 9 squares of 1 mm2 each. Count all cells within each large square. If too many cells are present, dilute the solution further and recount.
    3. Calculate cell concentration as follows: Total cells/ml = (total cells counted/# of squares) x dilution factor x 10,000 cells/ml, e.g., (500 cells/5 squares) x dilution factor of 20 x 10,000 cells/ml = 20 x 10cells total.
  12. Adjust the medium to a final concentration of 10 x 106 per ml (RPMI-S+ medium).

7. Malaria/HIV Co-infection Culture

  1. Plate 100 μl of isolated PBMCs and 400 μl of RPMI-S+ medium to a 24-well plate (1 x 106 PBMC per well). Ensure that wells are set up in triplicate: 3 wells for uninfected RBC, 3 wells with PfRBC, 3 wells with medium, and 3 wells with PMA/Ionomycin. This is both for the HIV(+) and HIV(-) samples.
  2. For the PfRBC wells, place 3 x 106 PfRBC in each of the wells (500 μl of parasite culture prepared in 5.2).
  3. For uninfected RBC wells, place 500 μl of the uninfected RBC culture prepared in 5.3 in each of the wells.
  4. For medium wells, place 500 μl of RPMI-S+ medium in each of the wells.
  5. For PMA/Ionomycin wells, prepare PMA/Ionomycin solution (2.5 pg/ml, 250 pg/ml respectively). Place 500 μl of this solution in each well.
    Note: As potent stimulators of T cell cytokine secretion, PMA, and Ionomycin are used as positive controls to ensure cells are functional.
  6. Place the plate at 37 oC in a 5% CO2 incubator.
  7. Optional: use excess cells for phenotypic analysis using flow cytometry or store them in an RNA stabilization solution for future mRNA expression analysis.

8. Detection of Malaria Immune Responses

Note: Perform co-culture experiments for as long as 4 days. No medium change is required during this time. The optimal time point will depend on the cell type of interest and the question asked. An incubation of 12-48 hr is optimal for monocytic responses to PfRBCs, while lymphocyte responses were best observed at 72-96 hr. The time points will need to be optimized based on the experimental question. Shorter periods (2-4 hr) may be used if the interaction between intact PfRBC and PBMCs is of interest.

  1. Spin plate at 300 x g for 3 min to pellet cells. Collect 700 μl of culture supernatant from each well.
  2. Spin supernatant at 1,000 x g for 5 min to clear any debris.
  3. Aliquot cleared supernatant as needed, label, and freeze at below -20 °C until analysis of secreted factors is to be performed.

Representative Results

Figure 1
Figure 1. Depiction of Ficoll gradient post spin demonstrating the position of the PBMCs.

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Materials

Alanine Sigma A7377
BD Vacutainer ACD Solution A BD 364506
BD Vacutainer Sodium Heparin BD 17-1440-02
DPBS (no calcium, no magnesium) Corning 21-031-CV
Fetal Bovine Serum Sigma F1051 Heat inactivate before use
Ficoll-Paque PLUS GE Healthcare 17-1440-02
Gentamycin (10mg/ml) Gibco 15710-064
Hema3 Staining Set Fisher 122-911
HEPES Fisher BP310-500
Hypoxanthine Sigma H9636
Ionomycin Sigma I3909
MEM non-essential amino acids (10mM) Gibco 11140
PMA Sigma P8139
RPMI-1640 powder Life-Technologies 31800-022
RPMI-1640 with L-glutamine and HEPES Thermo Scientific SH30255.01
Sodium bicarbonate (powder, cell culture) Sigma S5761
Sodium Pyruvate (100mM) Gibco 11360
Tris (Trizma base) Sigma T6066
Trizol Ambion 15596018
Trypan Blue (0.4%) Gibco 15250-061
Parasite Gas Mixture By special order 3% CO2, 1% O2, balance N2

Tags

Play Video

Cite This Article
Generation of an In Vitro Cell Culture Model of Malaria-HIV Co-Infection. J. Vis. Exp. (Pending Publication), e21717, doi: (2023).

View Video