Summary

Dans l'évaluation in vivo de rongeurs Plasmodium Parasitémie et Merozoite Invasion par cytométrie en flux

Published: April 05, 2015
doi:

Summary

Les envahit de parasites du paludisme et répétitions dans les globules rouges. L'évaluation précise de l'invasion des mérozoïtes et la parasitémie est donc crucial pour évaluer l'évolution de l'infection du paludisme. Nous décrivons ici un protocole basé sur la cytométrie en flux pour la mesure de ces paramètres dans un modèle de souris de la malaria.

Abstract

During blood stage infection, malaria parasites invade, mature, and replicate within red blood cells (RBCs). This results in a regular growth cycle and an exponential increase in the proportion of malaria infected RBCs, known as parasitemia. We describe a flow cytometry based protocol which utilizes a combination of the DNA dye Hoechst, and the mitochondrial membrane potential dye, JC-1, to identify RBCs which contain parasites and therefore the parasitemia, of in vivo blood samples from Plasmodium chabaudi adami DS infected mice. Using this approach, in combination with fluorescently conjugated antibodies, parasitized RBCs can be distinguished from leukocytes, RBC progenitors, and RBCs containing Howell-Jolly bodies (HJ-RBCs), with a limit of detection of 0.007% parasitemia. Additionally, we outline a method for the comparative assessment of merozoite invasion into two different RBC populations. In this assay RBCs, labeled with two distinct compounds identifiable by flow cytometry, are transfused into infected mice. The relative rate of invasion into the two populations can then be assessed by flow cytometry based on the proportion of parasitized RBCs in each population over time. This combined approach allows the accurate measurement of both parasitemia and merozoite invasion in an in vivo model of malaria infection.

Introduction

The clinical symptoms associated with malaria occur during the Plasmodium parasite’s asexual replicative cycle within red blood cells (RBCs). Merozoites, released during the liver stage of infection, quickly attach to and invade RBCs. After gaining entry into the cell, the parasite grows and matures, eventually undergoing schizogony, splitting open the cell, and releasing a cluster of newly formed merozoites which go on to repeat this cycle. As such, an assessment of malaria infection often involves monitoring both parasitemia, which is the percentage of RBCs appropriated by one or more parasites, and the rate of merozoite invasion into uninfected RBCs.

Flow cytometry is a powerful tool which can be used to record the properties of vast numbers of cells in a short period of time. This technique has clear applicability for the measurement of malaria parasitemia and invasion, and offers several advantages over traditional microscopy techniques. These include the accurate measurement of very low parasitemia, which would be prohibitively time consuming by microscopy, the unbiased nature of the measurement, and the ability to measure multiple cell parameters simultaneously. Flow cytometry is widely used to determine both parasitemia and merozoite invasion in in vitro culture1-9, however, techniques for measuring these parameters in vivo are less well developed, and can be complicated by the presence of additional cell types which interfere with analysis. No assays have been described for measurement of in vivo invasion, and while some assays exist for the analysis of in vivo parasitemia, these lack the ability to distinguish between parasitized RBCs (pRBCs) and RBCs containing Howell-Jolly bodies (HJ-RBCs)10-13. The later issue is particularly important as in mice HJ-RBCs may account for up to 0.9% of mature RBCs14-16, thereby preventing the accurate measurement of low parasitemia.

We have previously demonstrated an approach for the measurement of parasitemia and merozoite invasion in a rodent model of malaria infection14. Here, we provide a more detailed protocol and accompanying video. This approach builds on previous methodologies and allows for the accurate identification of parasitized RBCs, as distinct from leukocytes, RBC progenitors, and HJ-RBCs. Additionally, this assay allows the simultaneous measurement of merozoite invasion into two labeled RBC populations, a treated, or target, population, and a control population, thereby providing a robust platform for the assessment of invasion into different cell types.

Protocol

Toutes les procédures ont été menées en conformité avec les politiques de l'Université Macquarie et conformes au Conseil national de la santé et de la recherche médicale (NHMRC) Code australien de pratique. Le travail a été effectué en vertu de l'éthique de la convention n ° 2012/017 ARA approuvé et obtenu du comité d'éthique animale à l'Université Macquarie. Toutes les expériences ont été réalisées sur des souris SJL / J, sauf indication contraire. 1. Souris et expérimental…

Representative Results

Mesure de la parasitémie. Pour la mesure de la parasitémie, cellules de sang doivent d'abord être sélectionnés, et le bruit, les débris et les plaquettes exclus, basée sur FSC / SSC propriétés (figure 2A). Selon le cytomètre utilisé, les cellules individuelles doivent alors être sélectionnés en fonction de chaque largeur d'impulsion de déclenchement (figure 2B), ou FSC hauteur de crête à rapport de surface (figure 2C). …

Discussion

Nous avons décrit un procédé pour la mesure à la fois de la parasitémie et mérozoïte invasion d'échantillons in vivo. En termes de mesure de la parasitémie, cette méthode offre un avantage par rapport aux méthodes précédentes de 10 à 13 dans ce HJ-globules rouges peut être distinguée de pRBCs, réduisant ainsi le nombre d'événements de faux positifs. Alors que HJ-globules rouges sont généralement rare chez les humains, certaines études rapportent des niveaux élevés chez…

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

Nous reconnaissons le soutien financier du Conseil national de recherches Santé et paramédical (accorder APP605524, 490037 et 1047082), le Conseil australien de la recherche (subvention DP12010061), la stratégie de l'infrastructure de recherche en collaboration nationale de l'Australie et le fonds d'investissement de l'éducation du ministère de l'Innovation, de l'Industrie , de la science et de la recherche. La LEMP est une récipiendaire d'un prix Postgraduate australien.

Materials

bisBenzimide H 33342 trihydrochloride Sigma-Aldrich B2261 Hoechst 33342. Store a 4mM stock solution at -20 °C in distilled water
Hoechst 34580 Sigma-Aldrich 63493 Store a 2mM stock solution at -20 °C in distilled water
JC-1 Dye Life Technologies T-3168 Store small aliquots of 6mM stock solution at -20 °C in DMSO
Anti-Mouse CD45 APC-eFluor 780 eBioscience 47-0451-80 Clone 30-F11
Anti-Mouse CD71 PerCP-eFluor 710 eBioscience 46-0711-80 Clone R17217
Atto 633 NHS ester Sigma-Aldrich 1464 Atto 633-NHS. Store a 2mg/ml stock solution at -20 °C in DMF
EZ-Link Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin Thermo Fisher Scientific 21335 Biotin-NHS. Store a 25mg/ml stock solution at -20 °C in DMF
Streptavidin PE-Cyanine7 eBioscience 25-4317-82 Streptavidin PE-Cy7
Heparin Sigma-Aldrich H478
35µM filter cap tubes Becton Dickinson 352235
Flow cytometer: BD LSRFortessa Becton Dickinson
Flow cytometer: BD FACSAria II Becton Dickinson
Flow cytometer: BD Influx Becton Dickinson
Flow cytometer: CyAn ADP Analyzer Beckman Coulter

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Cite This Article
Lelliott, P. M., McMorran, B. J., Foote, S. J., Burgio, G. In Vivo Assessment of Rodent Plasmodium Parasitemia and Merozoite Invasion by Flow Cytometry. J. Vis. Exp. (98), e52736, doi:10.3791/52736 (2015).

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