Literature DB >> 2128851

Studies in search of a suitable experimental insect model for xenodiagnosis of hosts with Chagas' disease. 4--The reflection of parasite stock in the responsiveness of different vector species to chronic infection with different Trypanosoma cruzi stocks.

A Perlowagora-Szumlewicz1, C A Muller, C J Moreira.   

Abstract

Previous studies (1982, 1987) have emphasized the superiority of sylvatic vector species over domestic species as xenodiagnostic agents in testing hosts with acute or chronic infections by T. cruzi "Y" stock. The present study, which is unique in that it contains data on both infectivity rates produced by the same stock in 11 different vector species and also the reaction of the same vector species to seven different parasite stocks, establishes the general validity of linking efficiency of xenodiagnosis to the biotope of its agent. For example, infectivity rates produced by "São Felipe" stock varied from 82.5% to 98.3% in sylvatic vectors but decreased to 42.5% to 71.3% in domestic species. "Colombiana"stock produced in the same sylvatic vectors infectivity rates ranging from 12.5% to 45%. These shrank to 5%-22.5% in domestic bugs. The functional role of the biotope in the vector-parasite interaction has not been elucidated. But since this phenomenon has been observed to be stable and easy to reproduce, it leads us to believe that the results obtained are valid. Data presented also provide increasing evidence that the infectivity rates exhibited by bugs from xenodiagnosis in chronic hosts, are parasite stock specific. For example, infectivity rates produced by "Berenice", "Y", "FL" and "CL" varied in R. neglectus from 26.3% to 75%; in P. megistus from 56.3% to 83.8%; in T. sordida from 28.8% to 58.8% in T. pseudomaculata from 41.3% to 66.3% and in T. rubrovaria from 48.8% to 85%. Data from xenodiagnosis in the same hosts, carrying acute infections by the same parasite stocks, gave the five sylvatic vectors a positive rating of approximately 100%, thus suggesting that the heavy loads of parasites circulating in the acute hosts obscured the characteristic interspecific differences for the parasite stock. Nonetheless these latter were revealed in the same hosts with chronic infections stimulated by very low numbers of the same parasite stocks. Certain observations here described lead us to speculate as to the possibility of further results from other parasite stocks, allowing the association of the infectivity rates produced in bugs by different parasite stocks with the isoenzymic patterns revealed by these stocks.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2128851     DOI: 10.1590/s0034-89101990000300002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Saude Publica        ISSN: 0034-8910            Impact factor:   2.106


  6 in total

Review 1.  Parasite-Vector Interaction of Chagas Disease: A Mini-Review.

Authors:  Ana Beatriz Bortolozo de Oliveira; Kaio Cesar Chaboli Alevi; Carlos Henrique Lima Imperador; Fernanda Fernandez Madeira; Maria Tercília Vilela de Azeredo-Oliveira
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 2.345

2.  Experimental infection of two South American reservoirs with four distinct strains of Trypanosoma cruzi.

Authors:  Dawn M Roellig; Katherine McMillan; Angela E Ellis; John L Vandeberg; Donald E Champagne; Michael J Yabsley
Journal:  Parasitology       Date:  2010-02-04       Impact factor: 3.234

3.  PhyloQuant approach provides insights into Trypanosoma cruzi evolution using a systems-wide mass spectrometry-based quantitative protein profile.

Authors:  Simon Ngao Mule; André Guilherme Costa-Martins; Livia Rosa-Fernandes; Gilberto Santos de Oliveira; Carla Monadeli F Rodrigues; Daniel Quina; Graziella E Rosein; Marta Maria Geraldes Teixeira; Giuseppe Palmisano
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2021-03-11

4.  Discrete Typing Units of Trypanosoma cruzi Identified by Real-Time PCR in Peripheral Blood and Dejections of Triatoma infestans Used in Xenodiagnosis Descriptive Study.

Authors:  Inés Zulantay; Gabriela Muñoz; Daniela Liempi; Tamara Rozas; María José Manneschi; Catalina Muñoz-San Martín; Carezza Botto-Mahan; Werner Apt; Gonzalo Cabrera
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2022-07-12

Review 5.  Evasion of the Immune Response by Trypanosoma cruzi during Acute Infection.

Authors:  Mariana S Cardoso; João Luís Reis-Cunha; Daniella C Bartholomeu
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2016-01-18       Impact factor: 7.561

6.  Triatomine bugs, their microbiota and Trypanosoma cruzi: asymmetric responses of bacteria to an infected blood meal.

Authors:  Sebastián Díaz; Bianca Villavicencio; Nathália Correia; Jane Costa; Karen L Haag
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2016-12-09       Impact factor: 3.876

  6 in total

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