4.4 Article

Development and evaluation of a prototype non-woven fabric filter for purification of malaria-infected blood

Journal

MALARIA JOURNAL
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-10-251

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30872214]
  2. Asia Pacific Malaria Elimination Network Establishment Support Programme [107-02]
  3. National Basic Research Programme (973 Programme) in China [2007CB513100]
  4. National S & T Major Programme [2008ZX10004-011]
  5. Key Laboratory on Technology for Parasitic Disease Prevention and Control of Chinese Ministry of Health [WK009-001]

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Background: Many malaria-related studies depend on infected red blood cells (iRBCs) as fundamental material; however, infected blood samples from human or animal models include leukocytes (white blood cells or WBCs), especially difficult to separate from iRBCs in cases involving Plasmodium vivax. These host WBCs are a source of contamination in biology, immunology and molecular biology studies, requiring their removal. Non woven fabric (NWF) has the ability to adsorb leukocytes and is already used as filtration material to deplete WBCs for blood transfusion and surgery. The present study describes the development and evaluation of a prototype NWF filter designed for purifying iRBCs from malaria-infected blood. Methods: Blood samples of P. vivax patients were processed separately by NWF filter and CF11 column methods. WBCs and RBCs were counted, parasite density, morphology and developing stage was checked by microscopy, and compared before and after treatment. The viability of filtrated P. vivax parasites was examined by in vitro short-term cultivation. Results: A total of 15 P. vivax-infected blood samples were treated by both NWF filter and CF11 methods. The WBC removal rate of the NWF filter method was 99.03%, significantly higher than the CF11 methods (98.41%, P < 0.01). The RBC recovery rate of the NWF filter method was 95.48%, also significantly higher than the CF11 method (87.05%, P < 0.01). Fourteen in vitro short-term culture results showed that after filter treatment, P. vivax parasite could develop as normal as CF11 method, and no obvious density, developing stage difference were fund between two methods. Conclusions: NWF filter filtration removed most leukocytes from malaria-infected blood, and the recovery rate of RBCs was higher than with CF11 column method. Filtrated P. vivax parasites were morphologically normal, viable, and suitable for short-term in vitro culture. NWF filter filtration is simple, fast and robust, and is ideal for purification of malaria-infected blood.

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