Lactic Acid Supplementation Increases Quantity and Quality of Gametocytes in Plasmodium falciparum Culture
Rachel Marceau West, David Sullivan
Abstract
mosquitoes, essentially doubling prevalence of infected midguts and oocyst density. Supplementation on days 9 to 16 did not increase the quantity of gametocytes but did increase quality, as measured by oocyst density, by 2.4-fold. Lactic acid did not impact asexual growth, as measured by blood film counts and luciferase quantification, as well as radioactive hypoxanthine incorporation assays. These data indicate a novel role for lactic acid in sexual development of the parasite.
Topics & Concepts
GametocytePlasmodium falciparumBiologyMalariaParasite hostingVirologyPlasmodium (life cycle)Transmission (telecommunications)Lactic acidMicrobiologyImmunologyBacteriaGeneticsWorld Wide WebElectrical engineeringEngineeringComputer scienceMalaria Research and ControlInvertebrate Immune Response MechanismsMosquito-borne diseases and control