Literature DB >> 2683616

Recent studies of the biology of Trypanosoma vivax.

P R Gardiner1.   

Abstract

Recent biological investigations of the African trypanosomes have been moving away from their previous preoccupation with the phenomenon of antigenic variation. The feeling has arisen that antigenic variation, as demonstrated by the Trypanozoon and Nannomonas subgenera of trypanosomes, is too extensive, the number of serodemes too large and the coexistence of different species in many areas too complicated, to allow any immunoprophylaxis based on antibodies to variable antigens. This is, of course, not to rule out possible biochemical intervention in the biosynthesis or export of VSG molecules by trypanosomes. However, in the case of T. vivax, more information is required concerning antigenic variation and coat structure in this organism before these avenues of investigation are discarded. Ways of improving the yield of mature metacyclic trypanosomes in vitro must be found, so that the contribution of metacyclic variable antigens to the induction of immunity in T. vivax infection can be elucidated. The number of bloodstream VATs must be determined (perhaps by genetic rather than serological means), as there is evidence both for VAT exhaustion contributing to the self-cure of infected hosts, and for a possible limit to the number of VATs which can be expressed in infections in Africa. In South America nothing is known of the number of serodemes of T. vivax which exist, although such knowledge is obviously required, especially if immunity to bloodstream variants is the more important mechanism of inducing immunity to this trypanosome and true cyclical transmission is rare in, or absent from, that subcontinent. Further, in a fragile organism, with a coat of suspect integrity, the method of VSG packing and the relative exposure of underlying surface molecules seems to hold out even more hope for an immunological intervention based on cell surface but invariant molecules than is the case with T. brucei or T. congolense, although this is being attempted with the latter species. In T. brucei infections the appearance of the non-dividing stumpy population acts as a stimulus to the induction of humoral immune responses. In ruminants, antibody responses to T. vivax, at least as judged from lysis tests, lag behind the appearance of the different VATs by some days. It would be important to determine, therefore, whether, if late bloodstream forms could be induced more frequently in the ruminant, the speed of anti-VAT responses could be enhanced. Whilst self-cure appears to be relatively common in T. vivax infections, it is unlikely that it results in sterile immunity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2683616     DOI: 10.1016/s0065-308x(08)60334-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Parasitol        ISSN: 0065-308X            Impact factor:   3.870


  18 in total

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Authors:  E Tetaud; M P Barrett; F Bringaud; T Baltz
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1997-08-01       Impact factor: 3.857

2.  Trypanosoma congolense: the in vitro akinetoplastic induction sensitivity assay.

Authors:  H Chitambo; A Arakawa
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  1992       Impact factor: 2.289

3.  Trypanosoma vivax, T. congolense "forest type" and T. simiae: prevalence in domestic animals of sleeping sickness foci of Cameroon.

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4.  Trypanosoma vivax infections: pushing ahead with mouse models for the study of Nagana. I. Parasitological, hematological and pathological parameters.

Authors:  Nathalie Chamond; Alain Cosson; Marie Christine Blom-Potar; Grégory Jouvion; Simon D'Archivio; Mathieu Medina; Sabrina Droin-Bergère; Michel Huerre; Sophie Goyard; Paola Minoprio
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2010-08-10

5.  Comparative clinico-haematological analysis in young Zebu cattle experimentally infected with Trypanosoma vivax isolates from tsetse infested and non-tsetse infested areas of Northwest Ethiopia.

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7.  Non-invasive in vivo study of the Trypanosoma vivax infectious process consolidates the brain commitment in late infections.

Authors:  Simon D'Archivio; Alain Cosson; Mathieu Medina; Thierry Lang; Paola Minoprio; Sophie Goyard
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8.  An integral membrane glycoprotein associated with an endocytic compartment of Trypanosoma vivax: identification and partial characterization.

Authors:  B A Burleigh; C W Wells; M W Clarke; P R Gardiner
Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  1993-01       Impact factor: 10.539

9.  Comparative clinico-pathological observations in young Zebu (Bos indicus) cattle experimentally infected with Trypanosoma vivax isolates from tsetse infested and non-tsetse areas of Northwest Ethiopia.

Authors:  Shimelis Dagnachew; Getachew Terefe; Getachew Abebe; Asegedech Sirak; Enrico Bollo; Dave Barry; Bruno Goddeeris
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10.  Molecular identification of different trypanosome species and subspecies in tsetse flies of northern Nigeria.

Authors:  Clement Isaac; Marc Ciosi; Alana Hamilton; Kathleen Maria Scullion; Peter Dede; Igho Benjamin Igbinosa; Oyebiguwa Patrick Goddey Nmorsi; Dan Masiga; C Michael R Turner
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2016-05-23       Impact factor: 3.876

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