4.8 Article

A microfluidic model for single-cell capillary obstruction by Plasmodium falciparum infected erythrocytes

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2433968100

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI026912, R01 AI26912] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDA NIH HHS [DA 16249] Funding Source: Medline

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Severe malaria by Plasmodium falciparum is a potentially fatal disease, frequently unresponsive to even the most aggressive treatments. Host organ failure is associated with acquired rigidity of infected red blood cells and capillary blockage. In vitro techniques have played an important role in modeling cell deformability. Although, historically they have either been applied to bulk cell populations or to measure single physical parameters of individual cells. In this article, we demonstrate the unique abilities and benefits of elastomeric microchannels to characterize complex behaviors of single cells, under flow, in multicellular capillary blockages. Channels of 8-, 6-, 4-, and 2-mum widths were readily traversed by the 8 mum-wide, highly elastic, uninfected red blood cells, as well as by infected cells in the early ring stages. Trophozoite stages failed to freely traverse 2-to 4-mum channels; some that passed through the 4-mum channels emerged from constricted space with deformations whose shape-recovery could be observed in real time. In 2-mum channels, trophozoites mimicked pitting, a normal process in the body where spleen beds remove parasites without destroying the red cell. Schizont forms failed to traverse even 6-mum channels and rapidly formed a capillary blockage. interestingly, individual uninfected red blood cells readily squeezed through the blockages formed by immobile schizonts in a 6-mum capillary. The last observation can explain the high parasitemia in a growing capillary blockage and the well known benefits of early blood transfusion in severe malaria.

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