Journal article

Radical-mediated damage to parasites and erythrocytes in Plasmodium vinckei infected mice after injection of t-butyl hydroperoxide

IA Clark, NH Hunt, WB Cowden, LE Maxwell, EJ Mackie

Clinical and Experimental Immunology | OXFORD UNIV PRESS | Published : 1984

Abstract

Intravenous injection of t-butyl hydroperoxide rapidly killed Plasmodium vinckei in mice, and caused haemolysis. The same dose seemed harmless to unparasitized mice. Many parasites disintegrated inside circulating erythrocytes, so parasite death was not simply a passive consequence of haemolysis. Injection of desferrioxamine, which removes the traces of free iron that promote the dissociation of t-butyl hydroperoxide into radical species, prevented both parasite death and haemolysis. Lipid peroxidation, as measured by accumulation of malonyldialdehyde over 2 h in vitro, occurred in erythrocytes exposed to t-butyl hydroperoxide, and was particularly marked in erythrocytes from parasitized mic..

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University of Melbourne Researchers