1. Surface Characterization of Hematin Anhydride: A Comparison between Two Different Synthesis Methods.
- Author
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Guerra ED, Bohle DS, and Cerruti M
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Chemistry Techniques, Synthetic, Surface Properties, Hemin chemical synthesis, Hemin chemistry
- Abstract
During the intraerythrocytic stage of malaria, the parasite digests hemoglobin and aggregates the released heme as an insoluble crystalline material called hemozoin. This detoxification step is an excellent drug target for developing new antimalarials, which can bind to hemozoin surface to inhibit further growth. Although the bulk crystalline properties of hemozoin are well-known, the surface properties remain poorly defined. Here, we use a combination of spectroscopic and adsorption techniques to study the surface of synthetic hemozoin, hematin anhydride, produced by two different methods. We show that the two synthetic methods produce crystals with major differences, such as the amount of water adsorbed on the surface and surface carboxylate groups. These results imply that the methodology to produce hematin anhydride affects its surface reactivity; this information needs to be considered whenever hematin anhydride is used as a model to study host immune response or to design new antimalarials.
- Published
- 2016
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