Author:
Andrade Alice O.,Santos Najara Akira C.,Bastos Alessandra S.,Pontual José Daniel C.,Araújo Cristiane S.,Lima Analice S.,Martinez Leandro N.,Ferreira Amália S.,Aguiar Anna Caroline C.,Teles Carolina B. G.,Guido Rafael V. C.,Santana Rosa A.,Lopes Stefanie C. P.,Medeiros Jansen F.,Rizopoulos Zaira,Vinetz Joseph M.,Campo Brice,Lacerda Marcus Vinicius G.,Araújo Maisa S.
Abstract
AbstractObtaining Plasmodium vivax sporozoites is essential for in vitro culture of liver stage parasites, not only to understand fundamental aspects of parasite biology, but also for drug and vaccine development. A major impediment to establish high-throughput in vitro P. vivax liver stage assays for drug development is obtaining sufficient numbers of sporozoites. To do so, female anopheline mosquitoes have to be fed on blood from P. vivax-infected patients through an artificial membrane-feeding system, which in turns requires a well-established Anopheles colony. In this study we established conditions to provide a robust supply of P. vivax sporozoites. Adding a combination of serum replacement and antibiotics to the membrane-feeding protocol was found to best improve sporozoite production. A simple centrifugation method appears to be a possible tool for rapidly obtaining purified sporozoites with a minimal loss of yield. However, this method needs to be better defined since sporozoite viability and hepatocyte infection were not evaluated.
Funder
Brazilian Ministry of Health/DECIT/CNPq
Medicines for Malaria Venture
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
International Centers of Excellence for Malaria Resea
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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