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Dive into the research topics where Kanlaya Sriprawat is active.

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Featured researches published by Kanlaya Sriprawat.


PLOS Medicine | 2013

Malaria Burden and Artemisinin Resistance in the Mobile and Migrant Population on the Thai–Myanmar Border, 1999–2011: An Observational Study

Verena I. Carrara; Khin Maung Lwin; Aung Pyae Phyo; Elizabeth A. Ashley; Jacher Wiladphaingern; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Marcus J. Rijken; Machteld E. Boel; Rose McGready; Stephane Proux; Cindy S. Chu; Pratap Singhasivanon; Nicholas J. White; François Nosten

Francois Nosten and colleagues evaluate malaria prevalence and incidence in the mobile population on the Myanmar side of the border with Thailand between 1999 and 2011, and also assess resistance to artemisinin.


Scientific Reports | 2011

A rapid and robust tri-color flow cytometry assay for monitoring malaria parasite development

Benoı̂t Malleret; Carla Claser; Alice Soh Meoy Ong; Rossarin Suwanarusk; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Shanshan W. Howland; Bruce Russell; François Nosten; Laurent Rénia

Microscopic examination of Giemsa-stained thin blood smears remains the gold standard method used to quantify and stage malaria parasites. However, this technique is tedious, and requires trained microscopists. We have developed a fast and simple flow cytometry method to quantify and stage, various malaria parasites in red blood cells in whole blood or in vitro cultured Plasmodium falciparum. The parasites were stained with dihydroethidium and Hoechst 33342 or SYBR Green I and leukocytes were identified with an antibody against CD45. Depending on the DNA stains used, samples were analyzed using different models of flow cytometers. This protocol, which does not require any washing steps, allows infected red blood cells to be distinguished from leukocytes, as well as allowing non-infected reticulocytes and normocytes to be identified. It also allows assessing the proportion of parasites at different developmental stages. Lastly, we demonstrate how this technique can be applied to antimalarial drug testing.


Blood | 2011

A reliable ex vivo invasion assay of human reticulocytes by Plasmodium vivax

Bruce Russell; Rossarin Suwanarusk; Céline Borlon; Fabio T. M. Costa; Cindy S. Chu; Marcus J. Rijken; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Lucile Warter; Esther G. L. Koh; Benoit Malleret; Yves Colin; Olivier Bertrand; John H. Adams; Umberto D'Alessandro; Georges Snounou; François Nosten; Laurent Rénia

Currently, there are no reliable RBC invasion assays to guide the discovery of vaccines against Plasmodium vivax, the most prevalent malaria parasite in Asia and South America. Here we describe a protocol for an ex vivo P vivax invasion assay that can be easily deployed in laboratories located in endemic countries. The assay is based on mixing enriched cord blood reticulocytes with matured, trypsin-treated P vivax schizonts concentrated from clinical isolates. The reliability of this assay was demonstrated using a large panel of P vivax isolates freshly collected from patients in Thailand.


Malaria Journal | 2009

Effective and cheap removal of leukocytes and platelets from Plasmodium vivax infected blood

Kanlaya Sriprawat; Supaporn Kaewpongsri; Rossarin Suwanarusk; Mara L. Leimanis; Usa Lek-Uthai; Aung Pyae Phyo; Georges Snounou; Bruce Russell; Laurent Rénia; François Nosten

BackgroundInvestigations of Plasmodium vivax are restricted to samples collected from infected persons or primates, because this parasite cannot be maintained in in vitro cultures. Contamination of P. vivax isolates with host leukocytes and platelets is detrimental to a range of ex vivo and molecular investigations. Easy-to-produce CF11 cellulose filters have recently provided us with an inexpensive method for the removal of leukocytes and platelets. This contrasted with previous reports of unacceptably high levels of infected red blood cell (IRBC) retention by CF11. The aims of this study were to compare the ability of CF11 cellulose filters and the commercial filter Plasmodipur at removing leukocyte and platelet, and to investigate the retention of P. vivax IRBCs by CF11 cellulose filtration.Methods and ResultsSide-by-side comparison of six leukocyte removal methods using blood samples from five healthy donor showed that CF11 filtration reduced the mean initial leukocyte counts from 9.4 × 103 per μl [95%CI 5.2–13.5] to 0.01 × 103 [95%CI 0.01–0.03]. The CF11 was particularly effective at removing neutrophils. CF11 treatment also reduced initial platelet counts from 211.6 × 103 per μl [95%CI 107.5–315.7] to 0.8 × 103 per μl [95%CI -0.7–2.2]. Analysis of 30 P. vivax blood samples before and after CF11 filtration showed only a minor loss in parasitaemia (≤ 7.1% of initial counts). Stage specific retention of P. vivax IRBCs was not observed.ConclusionCF11 filtration is the most cost and time efficient method for the production of leukocyte- and platelet-free P. vivax-infected erythrocytes from field isolates.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2011

Dihydroartemisinin-Piperaquine Versus Chloroquine in the Treatment of Plasmodium vivax Malaria in Thailand: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Aung Pyae Phyo; Khin Maung Lwin; Ric N. Price; Elizabeth A. Ashley; Bruce Russell; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Niklas Lindegardh; Pratap Singhasivanon; Nicholas J. White; François Nosten

The efficacy of chloroquine in the treatment of Plasmodium vivax malaria is declining on the Northwestern border of Thailand. This randomized controlled trial in 500 adults and children shows that dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine is a safe and effective alternative treatment.


Malaria Journal | 2008

Plasmodium vivax trophozoites insensitive to chloroquine.

Wesley W Sharrock; Rossarin Suwanarusk; Usa Lek-Uthai; M. D. Edstein; Varakorn Kosaisavee; Thomas Travers; Anchalee Jaidee; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Ric N. Price; François Nosten; Bruce Russell

BackgroundPlasmodium vivax is a major cause of malaria and is still primarily treated with chloroquine. Chloroquine inhibits the polymerization of haem to inert haemozoin. Free haem monomers are thought to catalyze oxidative damage to the Plasmodium spp. trophozoite, the stage when haemoglobin catabolism is maximal. However preliminary in vitro observations on P. vivax clinical isolates suggest that only ring stages (early trophozoites) are sensitive to chloroquine. In this study, the stage specific action of chloroquine was investigated in synchronous cryopreserved isolates of P. vivax.MethodsThe in vitro chloroquine sensitivity of paired ring and trophozoite stages from 11 cryopreserved P. vivax clinical isolates from Thailand and two Plasmodium falciparum clones (chloroquine resistant K1 and chloroquine sensitive FC27) was measured using a modified WHO microtest method and fluorometric SYBR Green I Assay. The time each stage was exposed to chloroquine treatment was controlled by washing the chloroquine off at 20 hours after the beginning of treatment.ResultsPlasmodium vivax isolates added to the assay at ring stage had significantly lower median IC50s to chloroquine than the same isolates added at trophozoite stage (median IC50 12 nM vs 415 nM p < 0.01). Although only 36% (4/11) of the SYBR Green I assays for P. vivax were successful, both microscopy and SYBR Green I assays indicated that only P. vivax trophozoites were able to develop to schizonts at chloroquine concentrations above 100 nM.ConclusionData from this study confirms the diminished sensitivity of P. vivax trophozoites to chloroquine, the stage thought to be the target of this drug. These results raise important questions about the pharmacodynamic action of chloroquine, and highlight a fundamental difference in the activity of chloroquine between P. vivax and P. falciparum.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016

Declining Efficacy of Artemisinin Combination Therapy Against P. Falciparum Malaria on the Thai–Myanmar Border (2003–2013): The Role of Parasite Genetic Factors

Aung Pyae Phyo; Elizabeth A. Ashley; Timothy J. C. Anderson; Zbynek Bozdech; Verena I. Carrara; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Shalini Nair; Marina White; Jerzy Dziekan; Clare Ling; Stephane Proux; Kamonchanok Konghahong; Atthanee Jeeyapant; Charles J. Woodrow; Mallika Imwong; Rose McGready; Khin Maung Lwin; Nicholas P. J. Day; Nicholas J. White; François Nosten

The pivotal factor leading to the declining efficacy of the artemisinin-based combination on the Thailand–Myanmar border (mefloquine–artesunate) to a clinically unacceptable level is the increasing local prevalence of K13 mutations superimposed onto a long-standing background of Pfmdr1 amplification.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Significant Biochemical, Biophysical and Metabolic Diversity in Circulating Human Cord Blood Reticulocytes

Benoı̂t Malleret; Fenggao Xu; Narla Mohandas; Rossarin Suwanarusk; Cindy S. Chu; Juliana A. Leite; Kayen Low; Claudia Turner; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Rou Zhang; Olivier Bertrand; Yves Colin; Fabio T. M. Costa; Choon Nam Ong; Mah Lee Ng; Chwee Teck Lim; François Nosten; Laurent Rénia; Bruce Russell

Background The transition from enucleated reticulocytes to mature normocytes is marked by substantial remodeling of the erythrocytic cytoplasm and membrane. Despite conspicuous changes, most studies describe the maturing reticulocyte as a homogenous erythropoietic cell type. While reticulocyte staging based on fluorescent RNA stains such as thiazole orange have been useful in a clinical setting; these ‘sub-vital’ stains may confound delicate studies on reticulocyte biology and may preclude their use in heamoparasite invasion studies. Design and Methods Here we use highly purified populations of reticulocytes isolated from cord blood, sorted by flow cytometry into four sequential subpopulations based on transferrin receptor (CD71) expression: CD71high, CD71medium, CD71low and CD71negative. Each of these subgroups was phenotyped in terms of their, morphology, membrane antigens, biomechanical properties and metabolomic profile. Results Superficially CD71high and CD71medium reticulocytes share a similar gross morphology (large and multilobular) when compared to the smaller, smooth and increasingly concave reticulocytes as seen in the in the CD71low and CD71negativesamples. However, between each of the four sample sets we observe significant decreases in shear modulus, cytoadhesive capacity, erythroid receptor expression (CD44, CD55, CD147, CD235R, and CD242) and metabolite concentrations. Interestingly increasing amounts of boric acid was found in the mature reticulocytes. Conclusions Reticulocyte maturation is a dynamic and continuous process, confounding efforts to rigidly classify them. Certainly this study does not offer an alternative classification strategy; instead we used a nondestructive sampling method to examine key phenotypic changes of in reticulocytes. Our study emphasizes a need to focus greater attention on reticulocyte biology.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Effective Preparation of Plasmodium vivax Field Isolates for High-Throughput Whole Genome Sequencing

Sarah Auburn; Jutta Marfurt; Gareth Maslen; Susana Campino; Valentin Ruano Rubio; Magnus Manske; Barbara Machunter; Rintis Noviyanti; Leily Trianty; Boni F. Sebayang; Grennady Wirjanata; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Daniel Alcock; Bronwyn MacInnis; Olivo Miotto; Taane G. Clark; Bruce Russell; Nicholas M. Anstey; François Nosten; Dominic P. Kwiatkowski; Ric N. Price

Whole genome sequencing (WGS) of Plasmodium vivax is problematic due to the reliance on clinical isolates which are generally low in parasitaemia and sample volume. Furthermore, clinical isolates contain a significant contaminating background of host DNA which confounds efforts to map short read sequence of the target P. vivax DNA. Here, we discuss a methodology to significantly improve the success of P. vivax WGS on natural (non-adapted) patient isolates. Using 37 patient isolates from Indonesia, Thailand, and travellers, we assessed the application of CF11-based white blood cell filtration alone and in combination with short term ex vivo schizont maturation. Although CF11 filtration reduced human DNA contamination in 8 Indonesian isolates tested, additional short-term culture increased the P. vivax DNA yield from a median of 0.15 to 6.2 ng µl−1 packed red blood cells (pRBCs) (p = 0.001) and reduced the human DNA percentage from a median of 33.9% to 6.22% (p = 0.008). Furthermore, post-CF11 and culture samples from Thailand gave a median P. vivax DNA yield of 2.34 ng µl−1 pRBCs, and 2.65% human DNA. In 22 P. vivax patient isolates prepared with the 2-step method, we demonstrate high depth (median 654X coverage) and breadth (≥89%) of coverage on the Illumina GAII and HiSeq platforms. In contrast to the A+T-rich P. falciparum genome, negligible bias was observed in coverage depth between coding and non-coding regions of the P. vivax genome. This uniform coverage will greatly facilitate the detection of SNPs and copy number variants across the genome, enabling unbiased exploration of the natural diversity in P. vivax populations.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2012

Cryopreserved Plasmodium vivax and cord blood reticulocytes can be used for invasion and short term culture

Céline Borlon; Bruce Russell; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Rossarin Suwanarusk; Annette Erhart; Laurent Rénia; François Nosten; Umberto D’Alessandro

The establishment of a Plasmodium vivaxin vitro culture system is critical for the development of new vaccine, drugs and diagnostic tests. Although short-term cultures have been successfully set up, their reproducibility in laboratories without direct access to P. vivax-infected patients has been limited by the need for fresh parasite isolates. We explored the possibility of using parasite isolates and reticulocytes, both cryopreserved, to perform invasion and initiate short-term culture. Invasion results obtained with both cryopreserved isolates and reticulocytes were similar to those obtained with fresh samples. This method should be easily replicated in laboratories outside endemic areas and will substantially contribute to the development of a continuous P. vivax culture. In addition, this model could be used for testing vaccine candidates as well as for studying invasion-specific molecular mechanisms.

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