Abstract
In the acidic lysosome-like digestive vacuole, Plasmodium parasites crystallize heme from hemoglobin into hemozoin, or malaria pigment. Upon release of progeny merozoites, the residual hemozoin is phagocytized by macrophages principally in the liver and spleen where the heme crystals can persist for months to years, as heme oxygenase does not readily degrade the crystal. Previous studies demonstrated hemozoin modulation of monocytes and macrophages. Hemozoin modulates immune function activity of monocytes/macrophages. Here, we used purified/washed hemozoin (W-Hz) isolated from murine Plasmodium berghei infections and intravenously (i.v.) injected it back into naive mice. We characterized the modulating effect of W-Hz on liver-stage replication. Purified washed hemozoin decreases P. berghei liver levels both at 1 week and 1 month after i.v. injection in a dose and time dependent fashion. The injected hemozoin fully protected in nine out of 10 mice given a 50 sporozoite inoculum, and in 10 out of 10 mice against 2,000 sporozoites when they were infected an hour or a day after hemozoin inoculation. DNase treatment at the hemozoin reversed the observed liver load reduction. The liver load reduction was similar in mature B- and T-cell-deficient RAG-1 knockout (KO) mice suggesting an innate immune protection mechanism. This work indicates a role for residual hemozoin in down modulation of Plasmodium liver stages.
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