Heliyon (May 2024)

A 3D organoid platform that supports liver-stage P.falciparum infection can be used to identify intrahepatic antimalarial drugs

  • Shringar Rao,
  • Shahla Romal,
  • Bram Torenvliet,
  • Johan A. Slotman,
  • Tonnie Huijs,
  • Tokameh Mahmoudi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. e30740

Abstract

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Malaria, a major public health burden, is caused by Plasmodium spp parasites that first replicate in the human liver to establish infection before spreading to erythrocytes. Liver-stage malaria research has remained challenging due to the lack of a clinically relevant and scalable in vitro model of the human liver. Here, we demonstrate that organoids derived from intrahepatic ductal cells differentiated into a hepatocyte-like fate can support the infection and intrahepatic maturation of Plasmodium falciparum. The P.falciparum exoerythrocytic forms observed expressed both early and late-stage parasitic proteins and decreased in frequency in response to treatment with both known and putative antimalarial drugs that target intrahepatic P.falciparum. The P.falciparum-infected human liver organoids thus provide a platform not only for fundamental studies that characterise intrahepatic parasite-host interaction but can also serve as a powerful translational tool in pre-erythrocytic vaccine development and to identify new antimalarial drugs that target the liver stage infection.

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