Radiation-induced cellular and molecular alterations in asexual intraerythrocytic plasmodium falciparum

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Abstract

Background. γ-irradiation is commonly used to create attenuation in Plasmodium parasites. However, there are no systematic studies on the survival, reversion of virulence, and molecular basis for γ-radiation-induced cell death in malaria parasites. Methods. The effect of γ-irradiation on the growth of asexual Plasmodium falciparum was studied in erythrocyte cultures. Cellular and ultrastructural changes within the parasite were studied by fluorescence and electron microscopy, and genome-wide transcriptional profiling was performed to identify parasite biomarkers of attenuation and cell death. Results. γ-radiation induced the death of P. falciparum in a dose-dependent manner. These parasites had defective mitosis, sparse cytoplasm, fewer ribosomes, disorganized and clumped organelles, and large vacuoles- observations consistent with "distressed" or dying parasites. A total of 185 parasite genes were transcriptionally altered in response to γ-irradiation (45.9% upregulated, 54.1% downregulated). Loss of parasite survival was correlated with the downregulation of genes encoding translation factors and with upregulation of genes associated with messenger RNA-sequestering stress granules. Genes pertaining to cell-surface interactions, host-cell remodeling, and secreted proteins were also altered. Conclusions. These studies provide a framework to assess the safety of γ-irradiation attenuation and promising targets for genetic deletion to produce whole parasite-based attenuated vaccines. © The Author 2012.

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Oakley, M. S., Gerald, N., Anantharaman, V., Gao, Y., Majam, V., Mahajan, B., … Kumar, S. (2013). Radiation-induced cellular and molecular alterations in asexual intraerythrocytic plasmodium falciparum. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 207(1), 164–174. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jis645

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