Abstract
The mechanism underpinning chloroquine drug resistance in the human malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum has remained controversial. Currently considered models to explain the resistance phenotype include acquisition of a chloroquine efflux pump, changes in intracellular chloroquine partitioning, diminished binding affinity of chloroquine to its intracellular target, heme, and changes in heme crystallization. To challenge these different models, we have investigated chloroquine accumulation under trans-stimulation conditions and in the presence and absence of glucose. We show that, in chloroquine-sensitive strains, labeled chloroquine accumulation is steadily reduced as the pre-equilibrated chloroquine concentration is raised. In the resistant cells, the extent of accumulation is, strikingly, raised at the lower levels of preloading, in comparison with resistant controls in the absence of chloroquine. The trans-stimulation effect observed in chloroquine-resistant cells is strictly energy-dependent. The data are interpreted in terms of a model in which chloroquine is bound to intracellular binding sites, not different as between sensitive and resistant cells, but where, in resistant cells, there exists an energy-dependent carrier that moves chloroquine out of this intracellular compartment. A mathematical model describing the kinetics of these processes is presented.
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