| Literature DB >> 25890064 |
Claudia P Herrera1, Meredith H Licon2, Catherine S Nation3, Samuel B Jameson4, Dawn M Wesson5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chagas disease is an anthropozoonosis caused by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi that represents a major public health problem in Latin America. Although the United States is defined as non-endemic for Chagas disease due to the rarity of human cases, the presence of T. cruzi has now been amply demonstrated as enzootic in different regions of the south of the country from Georgia to California. In southeastern Louisiana, a high T. cruzi infection rate has been demonstrated in Triatoma sanguisuga, the local vector in this area. However, little is known about the role of small mammals in the wild and peridomestic transmission cycles.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25890064 PMCID: PMC4344744 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-015-0730-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Primers used for the detection and genotyping of Primer
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| S35 | 5-’AAA TAA TGT ACG GGK GAG ATG CAT GA | Minicircle variable region of kDNA | [ |
| S36 | 5’-GGG TTC GAT TGG GGT TGG TGT | ||
| TcZ1 | 5’-CGA GCT CTT GCC CAC ACG GGT GCT | Nuclear satellite DNA | [ |
| TcZ2 | 5’CCT CCA AGC AGC GGA TAG TTC AGG | ||
| Tc1 | 5’-ACA CTT TCT GTG GCG CTG ATC G | Miniexon intergenic region | [ |
| Tc2 | 5’-TTG CTC GCA CAC TCG GCT GCA T | ||
| Tc3 | 5’-CCG CGW ACA ACC CCT MAT AAA AAT G | ||
| Tr | 5’-CCT ATT GTG ATC CCC ATC TTC G | ||
| Me | 5’-TAC CAA TAT AGT ACA GAA ACT G | ||
| D71 | 5’-AAG GTG CGT CGA CAG TGT GG | D7 divergent domain of the 24Sα rRNA gene | [ |
| D72 | 5’-TTT TCA GAA TGG CCG AAC AGT | ||
| V1 | 5’-CAA GCG GCT GGG TGG TTA TTC CA | Size-variable domain of the 18S rRNA gene | [ |
| V2 | 5’-TTG AGG GAA GGC ATG ACA CAT GT |
Figure 1Molecular characterization of the flagellate forms from feces and strain isolates by amplification of the mini-exon intergenic region. (1–3) DNA from flagellate forms in feces: WB1F, WB2F, WB3F (4–6) DNA from T. cruzi strain isolates from feces of samples 1–3 respectively, (7–9) DNA from T. cruzi strain isolates WB4, WB758, WB759. DNA from references strains: TcI (Sylvio 10X), TcII (Esmeraldo). Agarose 2.5% gel.
infection in rodents identified by species
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| Mouse (n = 44) |
| 32 (73%) |
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| 2 (5%) | |
| Rat (n = 15) |
| 11 (73%) |
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Frequency of DTUs and mixed infections in infected rodent samples successfully genotyped
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| Mouse (n = 20) | 16 (80%) | 2 (10%) | 1 (5%) | 1 (5%) |
| Rat (n = 3) | 2 (67%) | ND | ND | 1 (33%) |
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ND: Not detected.
Figure 2Molecular phylogenetic analysis by Maximum Likelihood method. The phylogram depicting the phylogenetic relationships among the 27 T. cruzi DNA sequences corresponding to eight rodents, based on Miniexon intergenic gene sequencing. The un-rooted tree with the highest -lnL = 890.6637 is shown, allowing identification of the three different clusters corresponding to three different DTUs in the rodent tissue samples analyzed. Bootstrap values appear on each clustering branch. The last letter in the sample name refers to H: heart, M: skeletal muscle, L: liver, S: spleen. *indicates mice with mixed infections.
Number of the DTUs observed in the rodent tissue samples successfully genotyped
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| I Only (n = 16) | 14 (88%) | 5 (31%) | 2(13%) | 2 (13%) | |
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| II Only (n = 2) | 2 (100%) | ND | ND | ND |
| I-II † (n = 1) | 1† (100%) | 1† (100%) | 1† (100%) | 1† (100%) | |
| II-IV (n = 1) | 1 (100%) | ND | ND | ND | |
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| I Only | 2 (67%) | ND | ND | ND |
| II-IV | 1 (33%) | ND | ND | ND | |
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ND: Not detected.
† DTU TcI was found in the heart and TCII was found in the other tissues in the same mouse.
*Total of mice.
**Total of rats.
***Total of rodents.