Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 9 de 9
Filtrar
1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(46): 22946-22952, 2019 11 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31659055

RESUMEN

The most widely used antimalarial drugs belong to the quinoline family. Their mode of action has not been characterized at the molecular level in vivo. We report the in vivo mode of action of a bromo analog of the drug chloroquine in rapidly frozen Plasmodium falciparum-infected red blood cells. The Plasmodium parasite digests hemoglobin, liberating the heme as a byproduct, toxic to the parasite. It is detoxified by crystallization into inert hemozoin within the parasitic digestive vacuole. By mapping such infected red blood cells with nondestructive X-ray microscopy, we observe that bromoquine caps hemozoin crystals. The measured crystal surface coverage is sufficient to inhibit further hemozoin crystal growth, thereby sabotaging heme detoxification. Moreover, we find that bromoquine accumulates in the digestive vacuole, reaching submillimolar concentration, 1,000-fold more than that of the drug in the culture medium. Such a dramatic increase in bromoquine concentration enhances the drug's efficiency in depriving heme from docking onto the hemozoin crystal surface. Based on direct observation of bromoquine distribution in the digestive vacuole and at its membrane surface, we deduce that the excess bromoquine forms a complex with the remaining heme deprived from crystallization. This complex is driven toward the digestive vacuole membrane, increasing the chances of membrane puncture and spillage of heme into the interior of the parasite.


Asunto(s)
Antimaláricos/farmacología , Eritrocitos/parasitología , Malaria Falciparum/parasitología , Plasmodium falciparum/efectos de los fármacos , Quinolinas/farmacología , Cristalización , Eritrocitos/química , Eritrocitos/metabolismo , Hemo/química , Hemo/metabolismo , Hemoproteínas/química , Hemoproteínas/metabolismo , Humanos , Malaria Falciparum/tratamiento farmacológico , Malaria Falciparum/metabolismo , Plasmodium falciparum/fisiología
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(28): 11184-7, 2012 Jul 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22733729

RESUMEN

The human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum detoxifies the heme byproduct of hemoglobin digestion in infected red blood cells by sequestration into submicron-sized hemozoin crystals. The crystal is composed of heme units interlinked to form cyclic dimers via reciprocal Fe─O (propionate) bonds. Templated hemozoin nucleation was envisaged to explain a classic observation by electron microscopy of a cluster of aligned hemozoin crystals within the parasite digestive vacuole. This dovetails with evidence that acylglycerol lipids are involved in hemozoin nucleation in vivo, and nucleation of ß-hematin, the synthetic analogue of hemozoin, was consistently induced at an acylglycerol-water interface via their {100} crystal faces. In order to ascertain the nature of hemozoin nucleation in vivo, we probed the mutual orientations of hemozoin crystals in situ within RBCs using synchrotron-based X-ray nanoprobe Fe fluorescence and diffraction. The X-ray patterns indicated the presence of hemozoin clusters, each comprising several crystals aligned along their needle c axes and exposing {100} side faces to an approximately cylindrical surface, suggestive of nucleation via a common lipid layer. This experimental finding, and the associated nucleation model, are difficult to reconcile with recent reports of hemozoin formation within lipid droplets in the digestive vacuole. The diffraction results are verified by a study of the nucleation process using emerging tools of three-dimensional cellular microscopy, described in the companion paper.


Asunto(s)
Eritrocitos/citología , Hemoproteínas/química , Malaria/sangre , Animales , Cristalografía por Rayos X/métodos , Eritrocitos/parasitología , Hemo/química , Humanos , Lípidos/química , Malaria/parasitología , Sondas Moleculares/química , Nanotecnología/métodos , Óptica y Fotónica/métodos , Plasmodium/metabolismo , Sincrotrones , Agua/química , Difracción de Rayos X
3.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 21(Pt 1): 119-26, 2014 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24365925

RESUMEN

Under the experimental condition that all Bragg peaks in a powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) pattern have the same shape, one can readily obtain the Bragg intensities without fitting any parameters. This condition is fulfilled at the P02.1 beamline at PETRA III using the seventh harmonic from a 23 mm-period undulator (60 keV) at a distance of 65 m. For grain sizes of the order of 1 µm, the Bragg peak shape in the PXRD is entirely determined by the diameter of the capillary containing the powder sample and the pixel size of the image plate detector, and consequently it is independent of the scattering angle. As an example, a diamond powder has been chosen and structure factors derived which are in accordance with those calculated from density functional theory methods of the WIEN2k package to within an accuracy that allows a detailed electron density analysis.

4.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 20(Pt 1): 98-104, 2013 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23254661

RESUMEN

In a powder diffraction pattern one measures the intensity of Miller-indexed Bragg peaks versus the wavevector transfer sinθ/λ. With increasing wavevector transfer the density of occurrence of Bragg peaks increases while their intensity decreases until they vanish into the background level. The lowest possible background level is that due to Compton scattering from the powder. A powder diffraction instrument has been designed and tested that yields this ideal low-background level, obtainable by having the space between sample and detector all in vacuum with the entrance window so far upstream that scattering from it is negligible. To minimize overlap of Bragg peaks the combination of fine collimation of synchrotron radiation, a thin cylindrical sample and a high-resolution imaging plate detector is taken advantage of.

5.
ChemMedChem ; 16(10): 1515-1532, 2021 05 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33523575

RESUMEN

The biogenic formation of hemozoin crystals, a crucial process in heme detoxification by the malaria parasite, is reviewed as an antimalarial drug target. We first focus on the in-vivo formation of hemozoin. A model is presented, based on native-contrast 3D imaging obtained by X-ray and electron microscopy, that hemozoin nucleates at the inner membrane leaflet of the parasitic digestive vacuole, and grows in the adjacent aqueous medium. Having observed quantities of hemoglobin and hemozoin in the digestive vacuole, we present a model that heme liberation from hemoglobin and hemozoin formation is an assembly-line process. The crystallization is preceded by reaction between heme monomers yielding hematin dimers involving fewer types of isomers than in synthetic hemozoin; this is indicative of protein-induced dimerization. Models of antimalarial drugs binding onto hemozoin surfaces are reviewed. This is followed by a description of bromoquine, a chloroquine drug analogue, capping a significant fraction of hemozoin surfaces within the digestive vacuole and accumulation of the drug, presumably a bromoquine-hematin complex, at the vacuole's membrane.


Asunto(s)
Hemoproteínas/química , Malaria/parasitología , Plasmodium falciparum/química , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Modelos Moleculares
6.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 7610, 2017 08 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28790371

RESUMEN

A key drug target for malaria has been the detoxification pathway of the iron-containing molecule heme, which is the toxic byproduct of hemoglobin digestion. The cornerstone of heme detoxification is its sequestration into hemozoin crystals, but how this occurs remains uncertain. We report new results of in vivo rate of heme crystallization in the malaria parasite, based on a new technique to measure element-specific concentrations at defined locations in cell ultrastructure. Specifically, a high resolution correlative combination of cryo soft X-ray tomography has been developed to obtain 3D parasite ultrastructure with cryo X-ray fluorescence microscopy to measure heme concentrations. Our results are consistent with a model for crystallization via the heme detoxification protein. Our measurements also demonstrate the presence of considerable amounts of non-crystalline heme in the digestive vacuole, which we show is most likely contained in hemoglobin. These results suggest a tight coupling between hemoglobin digestion and heme crystallization, highlighting a new link in the crystallization pathway for drug development.


Asunto(s)
Hemo/química , Hemoproteínas/química , Hemoglobinas/química , Hierro/química , Modelos Químicos , Plasmodium falciparum/química , Vacuolas/química , Células Cultivadas , Cristalización , Eritrocitos/parasitología , Hemo/metabolismo , Hemoproteínas/metabolismo , Hemoglobinas/metabolismo , Humanos , Hierro/metabolismo , Cinética , Microscopía/métodos , Plasmodium falciparum/metabolismo , Plasmodium falciparum/ultraestructura , Espectrometría por Rayos X/métodos , Vacuolas/metabolismo , Vacuolas/ultraestructura , Microtomografía por Rayos X/métodos
7.
Acta Crystallogr B Struct Sci Cryst Eng Mater ; 73(Pt 4): 521-530, 2017 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28762964

RESUMEN

In recent years powder X-ray diffraction has proven to be a valuable alternative to single-crystal X-ray diffraction for determining electron-density distributions in high-symmetry inorganic materials, including subtle deformation in the core electron density. This was made possible by performing diffraction measurements in vacuum using high-energy X-rays at a synchrotron-radiation facility. Here we present a new version of our custom-built in-vacuum powder diffractometer with the sample-to-detector distance increased by a factor of four. In practice this is found to give a reduction in instrumental peak broadening by approximately a factor of three and a large improvement in signal-to-background ratio compared to the previous instrument. Structure factors of silicon at room temperature are extracted using a combined multipole-Rietveld procedure and compared with ab initio calculations and the results from the previous diffractometer. Despite some remaining issues regarding peak asymmetry, the new diffractometer yields structure factors of comparable accuracy to the previous diffractometer at low angles and improved accuracy at high angles. The high quality of the structure factors is further assessed by modelling of core electron deformation with results in good agreement with previous investigations.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 90(8): 085701, 2003 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12633441

RESUMEN

We report the results of an x-ray scattering study where both the dynamic and the static properties of a liquid crystal (8OCB) near the nematic-smectic A phase transition were probed. The static, time-averaged data show the gradual formation of smectic layers in the nematic phase, and we find that the smectic order correlation length parallel to the molecular axis diverges with the critical exponent nu( parallel )=0.70(4) at the transition. The literature value is nu( perpendicular )=0.58 for the perpendicular direction. By x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy, we find that the viscosity coefficient eta(3) shows critical, diverging behavior at the phase transition with a critical exponent x=0.95(5). This contradicts previous light scattering work (x=0.50), but is in good agreement with the theoretical prediction x=3nu( parallel )-2nu( perpendicular ) by Hossain et al.

9.
Langmuir ; 20(10): 4139-46, 2004 May 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15969408

RESUMEN

We present structural studies of Langmuir (L) and Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) films of new amphiphilic hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene (HBC) discotics, carrying five branched alkyl side chains and one polar group. The polar group is either a carboxylic acid moiety or an electron acceptor moiety (anthraquinone). Grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) and X-ray reflectivity, both utilizing synchrotron radiation, show that these amphiphilic HBCs form well-defined Langmuir monolayers at the air-water interface, with a pi-stacked columnar structure where the HBC cores are rotated around the surface normal and tilted relative to the water surface. The intercolumnar distance is 20 A. The HBCs are confined to a layer lying on top of the layer of polar groups that are in contact with the water subphase. Efficient transfer of the monolayer of the anthraquinone-substituted HBC derivative to hydrophobic quartz substrates by vertical dipping gave well-defined multilayer Y-type LB films. Polarized optical spectroscopy, GIXD, and X-ray reflectivity measurements show that the LB films consist of at least two phases. Heating the films results in an irreversible rearrangement to a single macroscopically aligned phase of hexagonally packed columns oriented along the dipping direction with disk planes perpendicular to the columnar axes and stacked in a cofacial manner. This phase transition is analogous to the reversible transition observed in the bulk material.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA