Abstract
Metabolomics is increasingly popular for the study of pathogens. For the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, both targeted and untargeted metabolomics have improved our understanding of pathogenesis, host-parasite interactions, and antimalarial drug treatment and resistance. However, purification and analysis procedures for performing metabolomics on intracellular pathogens have not been explored. Here, we purified in vitro-grown ring-stage intraerythrocytic P.falciparum parasites for untargeted metabolomics studies; the small size of this developmental stage amplifies the challenges associated with metabolomics studies as the ratio between host and parasite biomass is maximized. Following metabolite identification and data preprocessing, we explored multiple confounding factors that influence data interpretation, including host contamination and normalization approaches (including double-stranded DNA, total protein, and parasite numbers). We conclude that normalization parameters have large effects on differential abundance analysis and recommend the thoughtful selection of these parameters. However, normalization does not remove the contribution from the parasite's extracellular environment (culture media and host erythrocyte). In fact, we found that extraparasite material is as influential on the metabolome as treatment with a potent antimalarial drug with known metabolic effects (artemisinin). Because of this influence, we could not detect significant changes associated with drug treatment. Instead, we identified metabolites predictive of host and medium contamination that could be used to assess sample purification. Our analysis provides the first quantitative exploration of the effects of these factors on metabolomics data analysis; these findings provide a basis for development of improved experimental and analytical methods for future metabolomics studies of intracellular organisms.IMPORTANCE Molecular characterization of pathogens such as the malaria parasite can lead to improved biological understanding and novel treatment strategies. However, the distinctive biology of the Plasmodium parasite, including its repetitive genome and the requirement for growth within a host cell, hinders progress toward these goals. Untargeted metabolomics is a promising approach to learn about pathogen biology. By measuring many small molecules in the parasite at once, we gain a better understanding of important pathways that contribute to the parasite's response to perturbations such as drug treatment. Although increasingly popular, approaches for intracellular parasite metabolomics and subsequent analysis are not well explored. The findings presented in this report emphasize the critical need for improvements in these areas to limit misinterpretation due to host metabolites and to standardize biological interpretation. Such improvements will aid both basic biological investigations and clinical efforts to understand important pathogens.
Highlights
Metabolomics is increasingly popular for the study of pathogens
We conducted metabolomics on early-ring-stage (0 to 3 h) Plasmodium falciparum parasites lysed from host erythrocytes
Two parasite clones were grown in matched conditions, lysed and washed from the host cell, and analyzed via ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (UPLC/MS) (Fig. 1A)
Summary
Metabolomics is increasingly popular for the study of pathogens. For the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, both targeted and untargeted metabolomics have improved our understanding of pathogenesis, host-parasite interactions, and antimalarial drug treatment and resistance. The measurement of direct mediators of the phenotype, such as signaling and biosynthetic metabolites, can improve the ability to characterize phenotypes mediated by proteins that are not yet annotated in the genome For this reason, metabolomics is becoming increasingly popular in studies of intraerythrocytic stages of P. falciparum [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Metabolomics is becoming increasingly popular in studies of intraerythrocytic stages of P. falciparum [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12] These studies have improved our understanding of malaria pathogenesis [7], strain-specific phenotypes [11], and host-parasite interactions [9]. Specific functionality (i.e., artemisinin resistance) can be observed only in the early parasite stages and metabolic details would greatly advance our understanding of such phenotypes
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