Spinning Disk Confocal Microscopy of Live, Intraerythrocytic Malarial Parasites. 2. Altered Vacuolar Volume Regulation in Drug Resistant Malaria

Bojana Gligorijevic, Tyler Bennett, Ryan McAllister,§ Jeffrey S. Urbach,§ and Paul D. Roepe*
Department of Chemistry, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, and Program in Tumor Biology, Lombardi Cancer Center, Department of Physics, and Center for Infectious Diseases, Georgetown University, 37 and O Streets, Washington, D.C. 20057
Biochemistry, 2006, 45 (41), pp 12411–12423
DOI: 10.1021/bi0610348
Publication Date (Web): September 20, 2006
Copyright © 2006 American Chemical Society

 Supported by NIH Grants AI56312 and AI45759 to P.D.R. and NSF Grant DBI 0353030 to J.S.U.

,

 Department of Chemistry, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, and Program in Tumor Biology, Lombardi Cancer Center.

,
§

 Department of Physics.

,
*

 To whom correspondence should be addressed. Telephone:  (202) 687-7300. Fax:  (202) 687-6209. E-mail:  roepep@georgetown.edu.

,

 Center for Infectious Diseases.

Abstract

Abstract Image

In the previous paper [Gligorijevic, B., et al. (2006) Biochemistry 45, pp 12400−12410], we reported on a customized Nipkow spinning disk confocal microscopy (SDCM) system and its initial application to DIC imaging of hemozoin within live, synchronized, intraerythrocytic Plasmodium falciparum malarial parasites. In this paper, we probe the biogenesis as well as the volume and pH regulation of the parasite digestive vacuole (DV), using the fluorescence imaging capabilities of the system. Several previous reports have suggested that mutant PfCRT protein, which causes chloroquine resistance (CQR) in P. falciparum, also causes increased acidification of the DV. Since pH and volume regulation are often linked, we wondered whether DV volume differences might be associated with CQR. Using fast acquisition of SDCM z stacks for synchronized parasites with OGd internalized into the DV, followed by iterative deconvolution using experimental point spread functions, we quantify the volume of the DV for live, intraerythrocytic HB3 (CQS), Dd2 (CQR via drug selection), GCO3 (CQS), and GCO3/C3Dd2 (CQR via transfection with mutant pfcrt) malarial parasites as they develop within the human red blood cell. We find that relative to both CQS strains, both CQR strains show significantly increased DV volume as the organelle forms upon entry into the trophozoite stage of development and that this persists until the trophozoite−schizont boundary. A more acidic DV pH is found for CQR parasites as soon as the organelle forms and persists throughout the trophozoite stage. We probe DV volume and pH changes upon ATP depletion, hypo- and hypertonic shock, and rapid withdrawal of perfusate chloride. Taken together, these data suggest that the PfCRT mutations that cause CQR also lead to altered DV volume regulation.

Tools

History

  • Published In Issue October 17, 2006
  • Received May 24, 2006
    Revised Manuscript Received August 1, 2006

Recommend & Share

Related Content

Other ACS content by these authors: