Immunofluorescence staining protocol for STED nanoscopy of Plasmodium-infected red blood cells

Publication date: Available online 1 March 2019Source: Molecular and Biochemical ParasitologyAuthor(s): Ann-Kathrin Mehnert, Caroline Sophie Simon, Julien GuizettiAbstractImmunofluorescence staining is the key technique for visualizing organization of endogenous cellular structures in single cells. Labeling and imaging of blood stage Plasmodium falciparum has always been challenging since it is a small intracellular parasite. A widely-used standard for parasite immunofluorescence is fixation in suspension with addition of minute amounts of glutaraldehyde to the paraformaldehyde-based solution. While this maintains red blood cell integrity, it has been postulated that antigenicity of the parasite proteins was, if at all, only slightly reduced. Here we show the deleterious effect that even these small quantities of glutaraldehyde can have on immunofluorescence staining quality and present an alternative cell seeding protocol that allows fixation with only paraformaldehyde. The highly improved signal intensity and staining efficiency enabled us to carry out RescueSTED nanoscopy on microtubules and nuclear pores and describe their organization in greater detail throughout the blood stage cycle.Graphical abstract
Source: Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology - Category: Parasitology Source Type: research