| Literature DB >> 27580347 |
Gabriela Maíra Pereira de Assis1, Denise Anete Madureira de Alvarenga1, Daniela Camargos Costa1, Júlio César de Souza2,3, Zelinda Maria Braga Hirano2,3, Flora Satiko Kano1, Taís Nóbrega de Sousa1, Cristiana Ferreira Alves de Brito1.
Abstract
Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax have evolved with host switches between non-human primates (NHPs) and humans. Studies on the infection dynamics of Plasmodium species in NHPs will improve our understanding of the evolution of these parasites; however, such studies are hampered by the difficulty of handling animals in the field. The aim of this study was to detect genomic DNA of Plasmodium species from the faeces of New World monkeys. Faecal samples from 23 Alouatta clamitans from the Centre for Biological Research of Indaial (Santa Catarina, Brazil) were collected. Extracted DNA from faecal samples was used for molecular diagnosis of malaria by nested polymerase chain reaction. One natural infection with Plasmodium simium was identified by amplification of DNA extracted from the faeces of A. clamitans. Extracted DNA from a captive NHP was also used for parasite genotyping. The detection limit of the technique was evaluated in vitro using an artificial mixture of cultured P. falciparum in NHP faeces and determined to be 6.5 parasites/µL. Faecal samples of New World primates can be used to detect malaria infections in field surveys and also to monitor the genetic variability of parasites and dynamics of infection.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27580347 PMCID: PMC5027868 DOI: 10.1590/0074-02760160222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz ISSN: 0074-0276 Impact factor: 2.743
Variants of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) targets, primer sequences, sizes of the amplified fragments and references for the PCR protocols used in this study
| PCR | Target | Primers | Sequence (5’ - 3’) | Fragment | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nested 1 Reaction | 18SSU rRNA gene of | rPLU5 rPLU6 | 5’CCTGTTGTTGCCTTAAACTTC 3’ 5’TTAAAATTGTTGCAGTTAAAACG3’ | 1200pb | Snounou et al. (1993) |
| Nested 2 Reaction | 18SSU rRNA gene of | rVIV1 rVIV2 rFAL1 rFAL2 rMAL1 rMAL2 | 5’CGCTTCTAGCTTAATCCACATAACTGATAC3’ 5’ ACTTCCAAGCCGAAGCAAAGAAAGTCCTTA 3’ 5’TTAAACTGGTTTGGGAAAACCAAATATATT3 5’ACACAATGAACTTCAATCATGACTACCCGTC3’ 5’ATAACATAGTTGTACGTTAAGAATACCGC 3’ 5’AAATTCCCATGCATAAAAAATTATACAAA3’ | 120 pb 205 pb 144 pb | Snounou et al. (1993) Snounou et al. (1993) Snounou et al. (1993) |
| PCR conventional |
| MSP1bl10F MSP1bl10R | 5’ CAAGCCTACCAAGAATTGATCCCCAA 3’ 5’ATTACTTTGTCGTAGTCCTCGGCGTAGTCC 3’ | 200 pb | de Araújo et al. (2012) |
| PCR conventional |
| MSP1bl2F MSP1bl2R | 5’ GACGATATTGGAAAATTGGA 3’ 5’CTCCTTCAGCACTTTCACGCGCTT 3’ | 400 pb | de Araujo et al. (2012) |
| PCR conventional | Mammalian cythocrome B | cyBF cyBR | 5’ CCCCTCAGAATGATATTTGTCCTCA 3’ 5’ CCATCCAACATCTCAGCATGATGAAA 3’ | 350 pb | Kocher et al. (1989) |
| PvMS1 | Microsatellite | MS1F MS1R | 5’ CTATCTGAGGAATGGGGA3’ 5’ATTTACTATGACGAAGGTGA3’ | Variant | Rezende et al. (2010) |
| PvMS5 | Microsatellite | MS5F MS5R | 5’TGCTATTTGCTCGTCTGT3’ 5’GAGCGTTATCATCATTAG3’ | Variant | Rezende et al. (2010) |
| PvMS6 | Microsatellite | MS6F MS6R | 5’ACACATTTGACACAGTTCC3’ 5’ATGCCCTGGTCCCTACAA3’ | Variant | Rezende et al. (2010) |
| PvMS7 | Microsatellite | MS7F MS7R | 5’GTATTCCCCGTCTTGTCC3’ 5’CTTTGTCCGTTCTTATTTCT3’ | Variant | Rezende et al. (2010) |
Fig. 1: nested polymerase chain reaction used to amplify the 18SSU rRNA fragment of Plasmodium falciparum in an artificial mixture of the parasite with uninfected faeces from a New World primate. Results were visualized on a 2% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide. M: molecular weight marker (1-kb DNA ladder); H1 and H4: faecal samples without the parasite included; H2 and H3: faecal samples with P. falciparum strains 3D7 and W2, respectively; Pf+: positive control for P. falciparum (cultured) using genus-specific primers (GS, 1,000 bp) and species-specific (SS, 240 bp) primers; Ctr-: negative control (without DNA).
Fig. 2: detection limit of the parasite by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in an artificial mixture of uninfected faeces from a New World primate with Plasmodium falciparum from in vitro culture. Molecular diagnosis of Plasmodium infection by nested PCR using primers for P. falciparum (205 bp). Results shown in a 2% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide. M: molecular weight marker (1-kb DNA ladder); Pf+: positive control for P. falciparum, Ctr-: negative control (without DNA).
Fig. 3: natural Plasmodium vivax/Plasmodium simium infection detected in DNA extracted from the faeces of a captive Alouatta clamitans (BL33). Molecular diagnosis of Plasmodium infection was accomplished by nested polymerase chain reaction (18SSU rRNA) using specific primers for P. vivax. Results shown in a 2% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide. Pv+: positive control (DNA from a P. vivax-infected patient) and Ctr-: negative control (without DNA); M: molecular weight marker (1-kb DNA ladder).
Genotyping of Plasmodium simium using molecular markers
| Molecular Marker | Fragment size (pb) |
|---|---|
| MS1 | 224 |
| MS5 | 191 |
| MS6 | 209 |
| MS7 | 324 |
| MSP1 (BLOCK 2) | 397 |
| MSP1 (BLOCK 10) | 374 |
*: fragment size previously obtained from human samples; **: fragment size previously obtained from monkey samples; ***: fragment size previously obtained from monkey and human samples.