Diamond Magnetic Microscopy of Malarial Hemozoin Nanocrystals.

Phys Rev Appl

Center for High Technology Materials and Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of New Mexico, 1313 Goddard St SE, Albuquerque, 87106 New Mexico, USA.

Published: March 2019

Magnetic microscopy of malarial hemozoin nanocrystals is performed by optically detected magnetic resonance imaging of near-surface diamond nitrogen-vacancy centers. Hemozoin crystals are extracted from -infected human blood cells and studied alongside synthetic hemozoin crystals. The stray magnetic fields produced by individual crystals are imaged at room temperature as a function of the applied field up to 350 mT. More than 100 nanocrystals are analyzed, revealing the distribution of their magnetic properties. Most crystals (96%) exhibit a linear dependence of the stray-field magnitude on the applied field, confirming hemozoin's paramagnetic nature. A volume magnetic susceptibility of 3.4 × 10 is inferred with use of a magnetostatic model informed by correlated scanning-electron-microscopy measurements of crystal dimensions. A small fraction of nanoparticles (4/82 for -produced nanoparticles and 1/41 for synthetic nanoparticles) exhibit a saturation behavior consistent with superparamagnetism. Translation of this platform to the study of living -infected cells may shed new light on hemozoin formation dynamics and their interaction with antimalarial drugs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6594715PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.11.034029DOI Listing

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