Background. Resistance to artemisinin, which represents the current frontline therapy for malaria, has the potential to greatly contribute to the overall mortality from malaria. The molecular mechanisms responsible for the artemisinin resistance phenotype in P. falciparum remain poorly understood. Interestingly, only the early intra-erythrocytic ring stage of the parasite displays this phenotype. Untargeted metabolomics, a broad method to survey biochemical reactants and products in an organism, may provide insight into the metabolic explanations for artemisinin resistance. Herein, an in vitro method is described in which metabolites are isolated from early ring-stages of P. falciparum for use in subsequent metabolomic analysis.

Methods. Artemisinin sensitive and resistant P. falciparum parasites were tightly synchronized with D-sorbitol treatment. Fourteen flasks (with 3.5 × 106 average parasite equivalence) containing early ring-stage parasites were subsequently exposed to dihydroartemisinin (DHA) for six hours (controls were not drug exposed). The parasites were washed twice with drug free media and then lysed from the erythrocyte membrane using saponin. A series of wash steps were then performed to remove lysis products, which include contaminating erythrocyte metabolites, and frozen prior to analysis. This procedure was performed five times for each condition to provide replicates for metabolomic analysis. Parasite metabolites were then extracted from at least thirty microliters of pelletized parasite material using methanol and detected using liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry by a commercial metabolomics service (Metabolon, Inc.).

Results. Orotate, a metabolite product of pyrimidine biosynthesis, was reduced to undetectable levels in both sensitive and resistant parasites after DHA exposure. In addition, levels of both lipid and cholesterol-derived metabolites were significantly elevated in DHA-exposed sensitive parasites, compared to resistant parasites.

Conclusion. Untargeted metabolomic studies are achievable with low amounts of parasite material. Overall, the major metabolic effects of artemisinin treatment detected in our studies are consistent with previous targeted biochemical studies, lending credence to the appropriateness of our experimental design.

Disclosures.All authors: No reported disclosures.

Author notes

Session: 70. Oh One World: Infections from Near and Far

Thursday, October 27, 2016: 12:30 PM

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