The Deformability of Red Blood Cells Parasitized by<i>Plasmodium falciparum</i>and<i>P. vivax</i>
The Journal of Infectious Diseases 189(2): 190-194
Article 2004 English
Authors
RS
Rossarin Suwanarusk
BC
Brian M. Cooke
AD
Arjen M. Dondorp
Abstract
1 min read
Red blood cells (RBCs) must deform considerably during their multiple passages through the microvasculature and the sinusoids of the spleen. RBCs infected with Plasmodium falciparum (Pf-IRBCs) become increasingly rigid as they mature but avoid splenic clearance by sequestering in venules and capillaries. In contrast, RBCs infected with P. vivax (Pv-IRBCs) do not sequester. We compared the effects of P. vivax and P. falciparum infection on RBC deformability in a laminar shear flow system. Pf-IRBCs became more rigid as the parasite matured, but equivalent maturation of Pv-IRBCs resulted in a doubling of flexibility. Coincidentally, the IRBC surface area increased from 56.7±1.3 μm2 to 74.7±0.6 μm2 to 90.9±1.1 μm2 in ring-, trophozoite-, and schizont-stage Pv-IRBCs, respectively, whereas Pf-IRBCs did not increase in size. P. vivax increases the deformability of IRBCs and thereby avoids splenic entrapment
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