Malaria Journal (Apr 2010)

Alpha-tocopherol transfer protein disruption confers resistance to malarial infection in mice

  • Takeya Motohiro,
  • Yokoyama Naoaki,
  • Fukumoto Shinya,
  • Shichiri Mototada,
  • Ishibashi Kana,
  • Chiba Mayumi,
  • Ichikawa Chie,
  • Ueta Yoshiko Y,
  • Herbas Maria S,
  • Xuan Xuenan,
  • Arai Hiroyuki,
  • Suzuki Hiroshi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-101
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 101

Abstract

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Abstract Background Various factors impact the severity of malaria, including the nutritional status of the host. Vitamin E, an intra and extracellular anti-oxidant, is one such nutrient whose absence was shown previously to negatively affect Plasmodium development. However, mechanisms of this Plasmodium inhibition, in addition to means by which to exploit this finding as a therapeutic strategy, remain unclear. Methods α-TTP knockout mice were infected with Plasmodium berghei NK65 or Plasmodium yoelii XL-17, parasitaemia, survival rate were monitored. In one part of the experiments mice were fed with a supplemented diet of vitamin E and then infected. In addition, parasite DNA damage was monitored by means of comet assay and 8-OHdG test. Moreover, infected mice were treated with chloroquine and parasitaemia and survival rate were monitored. Results Inhibition of α-tocopherol transfer protein (α-TTP), a determinant of vitamin E concentration in circulation, confers resistance to malarial infection as a result of oxidative damage to the parasites. Furthermore, in combination with the anti-malarial drug chloroquine results were even more dramatic. Conclusion Considering that these knockout mice lack observable negative impacts typical of vitamin E deficiency, these results suggest that inhibition of α-TTP activity in the liver may be a useful strategy in the prevention and treatment of malaria infection. Moreover, a combined strategy of α-TTP inhibition and chloroquine treatment might be effective against drug resistant parasites.