Literature DB >> 6723894

Plasmodium gallinaceum: density dependent limits on infectivity to Aedes aegypti.

R Rosenberg, L C Koontz.   

Abstract

In acute, blood-induced infections of chickens, the malarial parasite Plasmodium gallinaceum is most infective to the mosquito Aedes aegypti 1 day before gametocyte numbers peak. In an effort to account for this disynchrony , daily changes in parasite infectivity, parasitemia, hematocrit, and hemoglobin were measured during the course of infections. Three events were correlated with the loss of infectivity: (1) In the 24 hr between park infectivity and peak gametocytemia , schizont-induced hemolysis reduced the red blood cell volume 22%. (2) P. gallinaceum zygotes, fertilized in vitro and mixed with heavily infected red blood cells from which all viable, mature gametocytes had been removed, produced 67% fewer oocytes than when combined with uninfected red blood cells. (3) Zygotes fertilized in vitro on the day of peak parasitemia produced 47% fewer oocysts than zygotes prepared 24 hr earlier. It appears that high parasite density reduces infectiousness by destroying, through hemolysis and intraerythrocytic metabolism, a substance necessary to the sporogonic stages, and that there is also an intrinsic loss of infectivity, possibly due to decreased efficiency of fertilization.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6723894     DOI: 10.1016/0014-4894(84)90096-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Parasitol        ISSN: 0014-4894            Impact factor:   2.011


  1 in total

1.  The establishment of Plasmodium berghei in mosquitoes of a refractory and a susceptible line of Anopheles atroparvus.

Authors:  J F Sluiters; P E Visser; H J van der Kaay
Journal:  Z Parasitenkd       Date:  1986
  1 in total

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