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Vol. 53, Issue 3, 492-496, March 1998
-Thalassemic Erythrocytes
Department of Biochemistry, Dihydroartemisinin and other artemisinin derivatives are relatively
ineffective against Plasmodium falciparum infecting
-thalassemic erythrocytes, namely hemoglobin (Hb) H or HbH/Hb
Constant Spring erythrocytes, as compared with those infecting
genetically normal erythrocytes. The variant erythrocytes accumulate
radiolabeled dihydroartemisinin to a much higher extent than the normal
ones, and the accumulated drug was retained after extensive washing, in
contrast to the drug in normal erythrocytes which was mostly removed.
At initial drug concentration of 1 mM, most (82-88%) of
the drug was found in the cytosol fraction of both variant and normal
erythrocytes. Binding of the drug to hemoglobins accounted for 40-70%
of the total uptake. Hb H accounted for 10.9 ± 2.7% and
12.4 ± 6.2% of total protein in HbH and HbH/Hb Constant Spring erythrocytes. HbH bound with 28.7 ± 6.7% of the drug, whereas HbH/Hb Constant Spring erythrocytes bound with 21.8 ± 8.3% of the drug. Binding experiments showed that Hb H had 5-7 times the drug-binding capacity of Hb A. For Hb H, the maximum binding capacity (Bmax) = 1.67 ± 0.17 mol/mol Hb, and
the dissociation constant (Kd) = 66 ± 17 µM, and for Hb A,
Bmax = 0.74 ± 0.18 mol/mol Hb and
Kd = 224 ± 15 µM. It is concluded that preferential binding of
dihydroartemisinin to Hb H over Hb A accounts partly for the higher
accumulation capacity of the
-thalassemic erythrocytes, which leads
to its antimalarial ineffectiveness.
Copyright © 1998 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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