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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2006, p. 1665-1673, Vol. 44, No. 5
0095-1137/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.44.5.1665-1673.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Victoria 3050, Australia,1 Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Victoria 3050, Australia,2 Centre for Geographic Medicine Research, Coast, Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kilifi, Kenya3
Received 28 November 2005/ Returned for modification 13 February 2006/ Accepted 27 February 2006
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Antibodies that inhibit the invasion of red blood cells by the merozoite form of the parasite are thought to be an important component of protective immunity by limiting parasite blood-stage growth in vivo (6, 8), thereby reducing total parasite biomass and organ-specific sequestration that contribute to disease pathogenesis. Monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies against several merozoite antigens generated by vaccination in animals inhibit invasion (7, 19, 26) and may confer protection in animal models (11, 23). However, very few studies have examined in detail the association between inhibitory antibodies and protective immunity in human studies due to methodological constraints on performing these assays in large studies in a reliable and reproducible manner with a limiting amount of test sera available. Although measuring antibodies to recombinant merozoite antigens by enzyme immunoassays has been widely applied in population studies, this approach has significant limitations and does not appear to be sufficiently informative when used alone. Recombinant antigens may not be in the same conformation as native proteins, and it is unclear how antibody levels relate to inhibitory function. Furthermore, such assays typically do not account for antibody affinity and fine specificity, which may be critical for inhibitory activity. Production of full-length and correctly folded recombinant malaria proteins is generally highly challenging and has only been achieved with a very limited number of candidate antigens. In the case of merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP1), for example, recent studies found a poor correlation between antibodies to recombinant MSP1-19 and MSP1-19-specific growth inhibitory antibodies (14, 20). Furthermore, acquired antibodies to MSP1 do not necessarily inhibit invasion and can block the action of inhibitory antibodies (13). Antibodies may also act by inhibiting the processing of merozoite antigens required for erythrocyte invasion (3, 12); these antibodies are not measured by conventional immunoassays using recombinant proteins. Such issues emphasize the need for functional assays to study immunity.
Reproducible high-throughput assays are essential for examining the role of inhibitory antibodies in protective immunity in population studies and vaccine trials and for the identification of targets of inhibitory antibodies. However, a number of factors have limited the application of growth inhibition assays (GIAs) to large population studies of malarial immunity. These include the time-consuming nature of the assays, small volumes of serum available from donors, particularly children, and the presence of antimalarial drugs in many clinical samples that hamper the measurement of inhibitory antibodies. In addition, there is a need for inhibitory assays with greater sensitivity to detect inhibitory antibodies in samples. An increasing number of transgenic parasite isolates with defined modifications to specific merozoite antigens (10) are valuable tools for identifying targets of inhibitory and/or protective antibodies. Presently, standard inhibition assays evaluate inhibitory effects during one cycle of erythrocyte invasion, and parasitemia is determined by microscopy, which is time-consuming and difficult to apply on a large scale. Here, we have addressed these constraints through the development and optimization of high-throughput inhibitory assays with improved sensitivity that generate reproducible results and use minimal volumes of serum. We have also developed and evaluated methods to remove antimalarials and nonspecific inhibitory factors from small-volume serum samples for use in GIAs that are suitable for large population studies.
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Growth inhibition assays. Parasite cultures were synchronized the day before starting the assay. At the commencement of the assay, the majority of parasites were at the late-pigmented-trophozoite to schizont stage (IEs) with few ring forms present. Parasite suspensions at 0.1 to 1% parasitemia and 1% hematocrit were cultured in 96-well plates that were incubated in a sealed, humidified, gassed box. Sterile U-bottom (353077) and flat-bottom (353072) plates (Falcon; Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ) were used with a culture volume of 25 to 50 µl/well, and small-volume plates (Microscreen; Robbins Scientific, Sunnyvale, CA) were used with a culture volume of 10 µl. The outer wells of each plate were not used but were filled with 150 µl of buffer for humidification purposes (resulting in 60 usable wells per plate). Parasitemia was determined using flow cytometry unless stated otherwise. In the optimized two-cycle assay, 25 µl of parasite suspension was added per well at a starting parasitemia of 0.4%, using U-bottom plates. Thereafter, 2.5 µl of test serum was gently mixed into each well and incubated at 37°C. After 48 h, 5 µl of culture medium was gently mixed into all wells and incubation continued. After 80 to 96 h, parasitemia was assessed using flow cytometry (see below). Parallel cultures were maintained and monitored for parasite development to determine the optimal time to measure parasitemia (when most parasites were late ring forms or early pigmented trophozoites). Incubation time was influenced by the stage and synchronicity of parasite cultures at commencement of the assay and by the length of the life cycle of the parasite line used. Serum and antibody samples were tested in duplicate.
Measurement of parasitemia. Thin smears of cultures were fixed in methanol and Giemsa stained for measurement of parasitemia by microscopy. For flow cytometry, 100 µl of 10-µg/ml ethidium bromide (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; pH 7.3) was mixed with 25 µl of parasite culture and incubated for 1 h in darkness at room temperature. After centrifugation, the supernatant was discarded, cells were resuspended in 200 µl/well of PBS, and the samples were processed using a FACScan or a FACSCalibur flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ). With the FACSCalibur, an automated 96-well plate sampler was used in high-throughput mode and each sample was mixed three times before analysis. Parasitemia was evaluated using FlowJo software (Tree Star, Inc., Ashland, OR) by first gating for intact erythrocytes by side scatter and forward scatter parameters and subsequently determining the proportion of ethidium bromide-positive cells.
Relative parasite growth rates were also determined by measuring parasite lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) activity, as described previously (15). Parasite culture samples for testing were first frozen and thawed to lyse cells and kept on ice until used. Nitroblue tetrazolium (2 mg/ml in water) and phenazine ethosulfate (0.1 mg/ml in water) were mixed with Malstat reagent (15), in a ratio of 1:1:10, immediately before use. Fifty microliters of the reagent mix was added to 20 µl of parasite culture (1 to 2% hematocrit) in 96-well microtiter plates. We found that this ratio of regents and parasite culture gave maximum signal compared to the background. Samples were incubated for at least 45 min at room temperature to allow color development, and absorbance was measured at 655 nm. Uninfected red blood cells (RBCs) at equivalent hematocrit were included as controls. To calculate relative growth of samples, absorbance values for uninfected RBCs were deducted from all sample values, and the value for each test sample was expressed as a percentage of control serum samples. All samples were tested in duplicate or triplicate.
Treatment of serum samples. Serum samples (50 to 100 µl) were dialyzed against PBS in 50-kDa-molecular-weight-cutoff (MWCO) dialysis tubes (2051; Chemicon, Temecula, CA) or in 60-kDa-MWCO Micro dispo dialyzer tubes (Spectrum Laboratories, Inc., Rancho Dominguez, CA) and subsequently reconcentrated to the original starting volume using centrifugal concentration tubes (100-kDa MWCO; Pall Corp., Ann Arbor, MI). For purification of Ig by ammonium sulfate, 70 µl of serum was diluted with 360 µl sterile 0.15 M NaCl and kept on ice, and 300 µl of saturated ammonium sulfate was slowly added. After 30 min of incubation on ice, the precipitate was isolated by centrifugation and washed once with 50% saturated ammonium sulfate solution before the pellet was dissolved in PBS. Samples were then dialyzed against PBS and reconcentrated by centrifugation, as described above, to the starting volume of 70 µl. IgG was purified using magnetic beads coated with protein G (Dynal Biotech ASA, Oslo, Norway) or protein G-Sepharose (Amersham Biosciences AB, Uppsala, Sweden) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Control human IgG was obtained from Pierce Biotechnology (Rockford, IL). Serum samples used were obtained from adults and children resident in the Kilifi District, Kenya, anonymous adult blood donors in Papua New Guinea (PNG), pregnant and nonpregnant adults resident in the Blantyre area, Malawi (1), and nonexposed adult residents in Melbourne, Australia. Ethical approval was obtained from the Ethics Committee of the Kenya Medical Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya; the Medical Research Advisory Committee, PNG; the College of Medicine Research and Ethics Committee, Blantyre, Malawi; and the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute Ethics Committee, Melbourne, Australia. Informed consent was obtained from all donors.
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Sera or plasma from donors, especially children, are usually obtainable only in small quantities. Therefore, there is a need to minimize the amount of test serum used in assays, especially if individual sera are to be tested in a range of assays. We established that high replication rates are obtained in 96-well plates using small incubation volumes. We evaluated replication rates in round-bottom plates (50- and 25-µl incubation volumes), flat-bottom plates (50 µl), and small-volume plates (10 µl). Using a starting parasitemia of 0.4 to 1% and incubation for one cycle of replication, no significant differences could be seen between the volumes of 50 and 25 µl using round-bottom plates (for example, when the starting parasitemia was 0.6, end parasitemia was 3.08 and 3.15%, respectively, mean of triplicate samples) or between flat-bottom and round-bottom plates. Multiplication rates achieved with D10, 3D7, and W2mef across many assays typically ranged from five- to eightfold per cycle. As a negative control, wells filled with uninfected red blood cells (incubated for 48 h and stained with ethidium bromide) gave a "parasitemia" of 0.05% using flow cytometry. Parasite growth was also achieved in 10-µl volumes in plates with small-volume wells; however, growth of parasites was reduced to 20% (mean of two experiments) compared to 50- or 25-µl culture volumes. Subjecting parasite culture plates to continuous agitation using a circulating tube roller, gel rocker, or plate shaker, did not improve the assay with regard to multiplication rates or sensitivity for detecting inhibitory antibodies (data not shown) and was associated with increased evaporation and lysis of cells in some experiments.
Comparison of methods for measurement of parasite growth. Different methods can be used to measure parasitemia and determine the relative inhibitory activity of samples. The use of flow cytometry to measure parasitemia using nucleic acid stains, such as ethidium bromide, has been validated and reported elsewhere (2). We confirmed this using our methods with which we found a very high correlation between parasitemia determined by flow cytometry compared to microscopy across several assays (e.g., r = 0.940, n = 12, one experiment). Using flow cytometry to measure parasitemia in single-cycle growth inhibition assays, we consistently found a high level of reproducibility in results, and repeat assays were significantly correlated (e.g., r = 0.904, P < 0.0001, correlation between two experiments using 24 dialyzed serum samples). To further evaluate results using microscopy versus flow cytometry, we performed a 48-h, 25-µl growth assay in round-bottom plates and parasites were highly synchronous at commencement of the assay. By flow cytometry, 100,000 events were counted, whereas by microscopy, 1,000 red blood cells were counted. When microscopy was used, 98% of the ring-stage parasites found at 24 h went through to pigmented trophozoites at 48 h, indicating that there was no major inhibition in the growth of parasites at these stages (data not shown). At 48 h, microscopy and flow cytometry gave results that were within the same range. When five of the slides were recounted again by the same person, the mean standard deviation was 32%, whereas by flow cytometry, it was only 4%.
An alternative high-throughput assay for evaluation growth inhibition is measurement of pLDH, which has been validated for drug inhibition assays (15). However, a modified assay (described in Materials and Methods) was required here that would be suitable for small culture volumes to minimize use of serum or Ig samples. In an initial analysis, there was a strong correlation (r = 0.97) between parasitemia and pLDH signal using serial dilutions of mature-stage IEs from culture. In one-cycle growth inhibition assays with serum from adult donors, there was an overall correlation between the inhibitory activities of samples determined by pLDH assay versus microscopy (Fig. 1A) (r = 0.794, n = 13, P = 0.001), although there were substantial differences observed with some sera. We also generally observed a good correlation between flow cytometry-based assays and pLDH-based assays; however, the pLDH assays were typically less sensitive for detecting inhibitory activity of samples (addressed in further detail below). Using synchronous parasites, results from repeat testing of 50 samples in separate one-cycle GIAs were highly correlated (Fig. 1B) (r = 0.804, P < 0.001). The major component of pLDH activity arises from mature pigmented trophozoite IEs present in cultures. Using the CS2 parasite line, pLDH activity from pigmented trophozoite-stage IEs was 3.6-fold higher than ring-stage IEs collected 24 h earlier (Fig. 1C). Some pLDH was also present in the medium (13% of the total signal from a culture of mature-stage IEs). We did not detect any significant signal from serum samples from exposed donors that were used in the assays (data not shown).
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FIG. 1. Measurement of parasite LDH activity for evaluation of P. falciparum growth. (A) Sera from adult donors were tested in a growth inhibition assay over one cycle of parasite replication, and parasitemia was measured using microscopy or pLDH activity. Growth inhibition determined by the two methods was significantly correlated (r = 0.794, P = 0.001). Results are expressed as percentages of parasite growth among nonexposed serum controls. (B) Sera were tested in repeat growth inhibition assays over one cycle of replication, with evaluation of parasitemia by pLDH activity. Results were significantly correlated (r = 0.804, P < 0.001). Data are expressed as percentages of parasite growth among nonexposed serum controls. (C) Parasite LDH activity was measured among ring-stage parasites (rings), mature pigmented trophozoites, pigmented trophozoites (trophs) with spent culture medium (CM), or spent culture medium alone. LDH activity was severalfold higher among pigmented trophozoites compared to rings, and the majority of activity was present in parasitized erythrocytes rather than in the parasite culture medium. The parasite line CS2 was used. Results represent means + standard errors of the means (samples tested in triplicate).
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FIG. 2. Comparison of P. falciparum growth inhibition assays performed over one or two life cycles. The starting parasitemia (using parasite line 3D7) for the two-cycle assay was one-fourth of the parasitemia for the single-cycle assay. The degree of inhibition by sera or antibodies was greater in the two-cycle assay. Results are expressed as percentages of PBS controls (contr) for each assay. Sercontr, serum from normal Australian donor; AMA, rabbit polyclonal antibody against AMA1, used at 0.5 or 0.25 mg/ml; PNG 1 to 6, dialyzed sera from Papua New Guinean adults. All samples were used in duplicate, and error bars indicate ranges.
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FIG. 3. Evaluation of parasitemia using flow cytometry. 3D7 parasites were used in a growth inhibition assay performed over two life cycles; the assay was stopped after approximately 80 h. Parasitized erythrocytes were labeled with ethidium bromide, and cells were processed using a FACSCalibur flow cytometer. Data were analyzed and plotted using FlowJo software. The population of intact erythrocytes was first gated and then plotted as a histogram. The y axis shows the number of events, and the x axis shows fluorescence in channel 2 (for ethidium bromide). The total parasitemia in this example was 10.4%.
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FIG. 4. Two-cycle growth inhibition assays. (A) Comparison of flow cytometry versus microscopy for evaluation of parasite growth using dialyzed serum from exposed and nonexposed donors. (B) Comparison of results from growth inhibition assays performed with or without intermittent agitation, using dialyzed serum samples. Results are expressed as a percentage of parasite growth among nonexposed serum controls. S1 to 4, sera from nonexposed Australian donors; 1 to 24, sera from adults living in Papua New Guinea. (C) Dialyzed sera were tested in repeat growth inhibition assays over two cycles of replication, with evaluation of parasitemia by flow cytometry. Results were significantly correlated (r = 0.872, P < 0.001). Data are expressed as percentages of parasite growth among nonexposed serum controls.
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FIG. 5. Evaluation of two-cycle growth inhibition assays with measurement of parasitemia (3D7 parasites) using pLDH activity (LDH) versus flow cytometry (Facs). (A) Different concentrations of polyclonal rabbit antibody against AMA1 were tested for inhibition of parasite growth. Final concentrations (mg/ml) are as follows: 1, 0.5; 2, 0.25; 3, 0.12; 4, 0.06; 5, 0.03. (B) The effect of using different starting parasitemias on parasite replication over two cycles was evaluated. Starting parasitemias are as follows: 1, 0.8%; 2, 0.6%; 3, 0.4%; 4, 0.2%; 5, 0.1%. Results are expressed as percentages of parasite growth among nonexposed serum controls. All samples were tested in duplicate, and error bars indicate ranges.
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FIG. 6. (A) Dialysis of serum samples effectively removes antimalarial drugs added to serum. Quinine in different concentrations was added to serum from a nonexposed Australian donor. The serum was dialyzed and used in a growth inhibition assay performed over one cycle of replication with measurement of parasitemia by flow cytometry. Untr ser, untreated serum; Q, quinine; Dial, dialyzed. (B) Comparison of dialyzed serum samples, Ig purified from the same sera, and untreated serum tested for growth inhibitory activity using an assay performed over two cycles of parasite replication. S1 and S2, sera from nonexposed Australian donors; A to K, sera from adult residents of PNG. (C) Different dilutions of serum or plasma were tested in a growth inhibition assay performed over two life cycles. AMA, rabbit polyclonal antibody against AMA1; PNG, plasma from an adult from PNG; Ser, serum from a nonimmune Swedish donor. All samples were used in duplicate with the 3D7 parasite line, and error bars indicate ranges.
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FIG. 7. SDS-PAGE of serum and immunoglobulins stained with Coomassie. Lanes 1 to 3, serum from the same nonimmune Australian donor; lane 1, dialyzed serum; lane 2, Ig purified from serum by ammonium sulfate precipitation; lane 3, untreated serum; lane 4, purified human IgG (from Pierce).
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We generally tested serum or dialyzed serum at a 1/10 dilution. Increasing the serum concentration to 1/5 in an attempt to increase the sensitivity to detect inhibitory activity was generally not advantageous, as nonspecific inhibitory effects were sometimes observed with nonexposed serum (Fig. 6C). We consistently found that a 1/10 dilution gave greater inhibition than a 1/20 dilution, both when inhibitory sera were tested and when anti-AMA1 was added to the sera. We also observed that a small number of freeze-thaw cycles of exposed sera or purified antibodies had no significant effect on inhibitory activity. When four samples from nonexposed donors were frozen and thawed (each time left for half an hour in room temperature) 25 times, and stored at 20°C, there was a mean increase in growth of 3D7 parasites in a two-cycle assay of 34%. After only three freeze-thaw cycles, no significant difference could be seen. This suggests that serum samples should be frozen and thawed as few times as possible.
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We validated our optimized two-cycle assay by demonstrating that results from repeat assays were highly correlated and that variation in starting parasitemia and the addition of different concentrations of inhibitory AMA1 antibody gave entirely predictable results. There was a near-linear relationship between end parasitemia and start parasitemia and between degree of inhibition and antibody concentration. Optimal performance of small-volume two-cycle assays involved using culture medium supplemented with Albumax, hypoxanthine, serum from nonexposed donors, and glutamine, cultured in volumes of 25 µl per well with the addition of 5 µl of culture medium after 48 h. Serum samples are used at a 1/10 dilution, and parasitemia is measured by flow cytometry.
We confirmed that inhibition of parasite growth was mediated by antibodies by using Ig purified from serum. Dialysis was shown to be an effective method of removing antimalarials and, possibly, other nonantibody inhibitory factors from sera and can be readily used with small sample volumes. For purification of Ig, ammonium sulfate precipitation had several advantages over protein G beads and gave a greater yield. Ammonium sulfate precipitation copurifies IgM, which may be an important component of the inhibitory activity. When the ammonium sulfate-precipitated samples were examined by SDS-PAGE, the majority of protein seen was composed of IgG. When these samples were compared with dialyzed samples, the results were very similar. However, dialysis is a more straightforward and reproducible way of preparing samples because there are fewer steps in this procedure, less protein is lost, and a smaller volume of samples can be processed. This is particularly important when volumes are scarce, which they often are in clinical studies. Removal of nonspecific inhibitory effects improves the validity and usefulness of the assay. It may be possible to modify this assay to include the addition of monocytes to measure antibody-dependent cellular inhibition (5).
We found that growth inhibition assays run over two cycles of erythrocyte invasion were more sensitive than single-cycle assays, and the degree of inhibition by test serum or antibodies increased significantly. Although parasites were typically less synchronous after two cycles than after one cycle of invasion, this problem was overcome by stopping the assay at an appropriate stage, which was typically after 80 h, and by gating all parasites when analyzing flow cytometry data. Others have successfully used multicycle assays for phenotyping the invasion characteristics of isolates (21). One factor that is probably important for reproducibility is optimization of growth conditions. Hence, for each parasite line, factors such as different culture media, starting parasitemias, and pH should be evaluated. When a large number of samples are being tested, we usually employ two people to set up the assay to minimize the setup time. To increase reproducibility, repeated freezing and thawing of patient samples should also be avoided. In developing a simple two-cycle invasion assay that did not involve changes of media, which is cumbersome and may introduce error, it was necessary to reduce the hematocrit and starting parasitemia to avoid overgrowth of parasites and exhaustion of nutrients in culture medium. We established that, under our conditions, the total parasite numbers remained below the critical support capacity of the medium. Replication rates were similar across a range of starting parasitemias (Fig. 5) and were similar between the first and second cycles of replication.
Using flow cytometry considerably facilitated measurement of parasitemia. The sensitivity in differentiating parasitized from nonparasitized red blood cells appears similar whether microscopy or flow cytometry is used. Flow cytometry is much more rapid than microscopy, and the number of red blood cells that can be counted in a short time is radically higher, leading to decreased variation between samples. When a 96-well automated plate sampler is used with the flow cytometer, even more samples can be read in the same time and the risk of error when transferring samples from plates to tubes is eliminated. Interobserver and within-observer error is a potential major problem with microcopy. Reading of 60 samples takes around 15 min with a plate sampler by flow cytometry, but with microscopy it takes 3 to 5 h. Additionally, it is difficult to prepare good quality blood smears for microscopy when performing small volume assays. Several different nucleic acid dyes are suitable for labeling parasitized RBCs. The advantage of ethidium bromide is that it can be used on standard flow cytometers, whereas dyes such as 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and Hoechst require UV excitation, which is not available on standard flow cytometers.
Other high-throughput methods, as alternatives to microscopy, have been reported for evaluation of parasite growth in drug assays. These include pLDH-based assays, radiolabeled-hypoxanthine incorporation, and staining of parasite nucleic acids with fluorescent dyes (15, 22, 24). A potential limitation of these assays is that larger culture volumes and greater amounts of parasite material are generally used and they have not been widely adapted for assays with human serum. A recent study reported the use of a pLDH-based single-cycle assay to measure vaccine-induced antibodies in human sera using larger culture volumes than in our assays (16). In our studies, we found that pLDH assays generally gave reproducible results, when compared to microscopy or flow cytometry, for measurement of inhibition by serum or antibodies in small-volume single-cycle assays; however, this method was generally less sensitive than microscopy or flow cytometry. When pLDH determination was used in two-cycle assays, the sensitivity was considerably lower than for flow cytometry. The pLDH assay might have worked better if larger volumes and higher hematocrit had been employed (to give greater parasite material), but our aim was to perform assays that used volumes that were as small as possible. One potential reason for the reduced sensitivity of the pLDH-based assay for differentiating inhibitory activities or parasitemia may arise from asynchrony in parasite cultures, particularly when using a two-cycle assay. We demonstrated here substantial differences in pLDH activity among ring-stage and mature pigmented trophozoites; ring-stage and late-stage parasites can be separately analyzed among data from flow cytometry. A further limitation of indirect methods for determining parasitemia, such as pLDH assays (15), fluorimetry (24), or radioisotope incorporation (22), is that it is not possible to easily check for potential nonspecific inhibitory effects (e.g., cell lysis) or examine differences in parasite stages between test samples. This can be readily done with flow cytometry by reviewing data plots for each sample by using the appropriate software.
In conclusion, we have developed reliable high-throughput assays with greater sensitivity for measuring growth inhibitory antibodies in serum and demonstrated that the major inhibitory activity in serum is due to antibodies. Application of these assays, specifically adapted for use in population studies and clinical trials, should greatly facilitate studies of potential molecules for malaria vaccines and for the identification and measurement of mediators of protective immunity. Additionally, these assays would also be suitable for testing of other inhibitors, such as antimalarial drugs, peptides, or other molecules, particularly where greater sensitivity is needed and when the amounts of test inhibitors are limited.
We particularly thank Joanne Chesson and Fiona McCallum for assistance with microscopy, sample preparation, and flow cytometry; Danny Wilson and Kevin Tetteh for feedback on using the two cycle assays; Michael Makler for providing protocols for pLDH assays; and Graham Brown and Brendan Crabb for helpful discussions. Erythrocytes and serum for parasite culture were provided by the Red Cross Blood Bank, Melbourne, Australia.
This article is published with the permission of the Director, Kenya Medical Research Institute.
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