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1.
Acta Trop ; 155: 34-42, 2016 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26708994

RESUMO

Understanding the complex epidemiology of Trypanosoma cruzi transmission cycles requires comparative studies in widely different environments. We assessed the occurrence of T. cruzi infection in sylvatic mammals, their infectiousness to the vector, and parasite genotypes in a protected area of the Argentine Chaco, and compared them with information obtained similarly in a nearby disturbed area. A total of 278 mammals from >23 species in the protected area were diagnosed for T. cruzi infection using xenodiagnosis, kDNA-PCR and nuclear satellite DNA-PCR (SAT) from blood samples. The relative abundance and species composition differed substantially between areas. Didelphis albiventris opossums were less abundant in the protected area; had a significantly lower body mass index, and a stage structure biased toward earlier stages. The capture of armadillos was lower in the protected area. The composite prevalence of T. cruzi infection across host species was significantly lower in the protected area (11.1%) than in the disturbed area (22.1%), and heterogeneous across species groups. The prevalence of infection in D. albiventris and Thylamys pusilla opossums was significantly lower in the protected area (nil for D. albiventris), whereas infection in sigmodontine rodents was three times higher in the protected area (17.5 versus 5.7%). Parasite isolates from the two xenodiagnosis-positive mammals (1 Dasypus novemcinctus and 1 Conepatus chinga) were typed as TcIII; both specimens were highly infectious to Triatoma infestans. Fat-tailed opossums, bats and rodents were kDNA-PCR-positive and xenodiagnosis-negative. Desmodus rotundus and Myotis bats were found infected with T. cruzi for the first time in the Gran Chaco.


Assuntos
Animais Selvagens/parasitologia , Doença de Chagas/veterinária , Reservatórios de Doenças/parasitologia , Mamíferos/parasitologia , Animais , Argentina/epidemiologia , Tatus/parasitologia , Doença de Chagas/epidemiologia , Doença de Chagas/transmissão , Quirópteros/parasitologia , Didelphis/parasitologia , Mephitidae/parasitologia , Gambás/parasitologia , Doenças dos Roedores/epidemiologia , Doenças dos Roedores/parasitologia , Doenças dos Roedores/transmissão , Roedores , Trypanosoma cruzi/isolamento & purificação
2.
Infect Genet Evol ; 25: 36-43, 2014 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24732410

RESUMO

The competence of reservoir hosts of vector-borne pathogens is directly linked to its capacity to infect the vector. Domestic dogs and cats are major domestic reservoir hosts of Trypanosoma cruzi, and exhibit a much higher infectiousness to triatomines than seropositive humans. We quantified the concentration of T. cruzi DNA in the peripheral blood of naturally-infected dogs and cats (a surrogate of intensity of parasitemia), and evaluated its association with infectiousness to the vector in a high-risk area of the Argentinean Chaco. To measure infectiousness, 44 infected dogs and 15 infected cats were each exposed to xenodiagnosis with 10-20 uninfected, laboratory-reared Triatoma infestans that blood-fed to repletion and were later individually examined for infection by optical microscopy. Parasite DNA concentration (expressed as equivalent amounts of parasite DNA per mL, Pe/mL) was estimated by real-time PCR amplification of the nuclear satellite DNA. Infectiousness increased steeply with parasite DNA concentration both in dogs and cats. Neither the median parasite load nor the mean infectiousness differed significantly between dogs (8.1Pe/mL and 48%) and cats (9.7Pe/mL and 44%), respectively. The infectiousness of dogs was positively and significantly associated with parasite load and an index of the host's body condition, but not with dog's age, parasite discrete typing unit and exposure to infected bugs in a random-effects multiple logistic regression model. Real-time PCR was more sensitive and less time-consuming than xenodiagnosis, and in conjunction with the body condition index, may be used to identify highly infectious hosts and implement novel control strategies.


Assuntos
Doenças do Gato/diagnóstico , Doença de Chagas/veterinária , Reservatórios de Doenças , Doenças do Cão/diagnóstico , Triatoma/parasitologia , Trypanosoma cruzi/isolamento & purificação , Animais , Doenças do Gato/parasitologia , Gatos , Doença de Chagas/parasitologia , DNA Satélite/genética , Doenças do Cão/parasitologia , Cães , Feminino , Humanos , Insetos Vetores/parasitologia , Parasitemia/parasitologia , Parasitemia/veterinária , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase em Tempo Real , Trypanosoma cruzi/genética , Trypanosoma cruzi/patogenicidade , Xenodiagnóstico
3.
Acta Trop ; 126(3): 211-7, 2013 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23499860

RESUMO

Domestic dogs and cats are major domestic reservoir hosts of Trypanosoma cruzi and a risk factor for parasite transmission. In this study we assessed the relative performance of a polymerase chain reaction assay targeted to minicircle DNA (kDNA-PCR) in reference to conventional serological tests, a rapid dipstick test and xenodiagnosis to detect T. cruzi infection in dogs and cats from an endemic rural area in northeastern Argentina. A total of 43 dogs and 13 cats seropositive for T. cruzi by an immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and an indirect hemagglutination assay (IHA), which had been examined by xenodiagnosis, were also tested by kDNA-PCR. kDNA-PCR was nearly as sensitive as xenodiagnosis for detecting T. cruzi-infectious dogs and cats. kDNA-PCR was slightly more sensitive than xenodiagnosis in seropositive dogs (91% versus 86%, respectively) and cats (77% against 54%, respectively), but failed to detect all of the seropositive individuals. ELISA and IHA detected all xenodiagnosis-positive dogs and both outcomes largely agreed (kappa coefficient, κ=0.92), whereas both assays failed to detect all of the xenodiagnosis-positive cats and their agreement was moderate (κ=0.68). In dogs, the sensitivity of the dipstick test was 95% and agreed closely with the outcome of conventional serological tests (κ=0.82). The high sensitivity of kDNA-PCR to detect T. cruzi infections in naturally infected dogs and cats supports its application as a diagnostic tool complementary to serology and may replace the use of xenodiagnosis or hemoculture.


Assuntos
Doenças do Gato/diagnóstico , Doença de Chagas/veterinária , Testes Diagnósticos de Rotina/métodos , Doenças do Cão/diagnóstico , Parasitologia/métodos , Trypanosoma cruzi/isolamento & purificação , Medicina Veterinária/métodos , Animais , Argentina , Doenças do Gato/parasitologia , Gatos , Doença de Chagas/diagnóstico , Doença de Chagas/parasitologia , Doenças do Cão/parasitologia , Cães , Técnicas de Diagnóstico Molecular/métodos , Sensibilidade e Especificidade , Testes Sorológicos/métodos , Trypanosoma cruzi/genética , Trypanosoma cruzi/imunologia
4.
Parasitology ; 140(3): 303-8, 2013 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23058180

RESUMO

The discrete typing units (DTUs) of Trypanosoma cruzi that infect domestic dogs and cats have rarely been studied. With this purpose we conducted a cross-sectional xenodiagnostic survey of dog and cat populations residing in 2 infested rural villages in Pampa del Indio, in the humid Argentine Chaco. Parasites were isolated by culture from 44 dogs and 12 cats with a positive xenodiagnosis. DTUs were identified from parasite culture samples using a strategy based on multiple polymerase-chain reactions. TcVI was identified in 37 of 44 dogs and in 10 of 12 cats, whereas TcV was identified in 5 dogs and in 2 cats -a new finding for cats. No mixed infections were detected. The occurrence of 2 dogs infected with TcIII -classically found in armadillos- suggests a probable link with the local sylvatic transmission cycle involving Dasypus novemcinctus armadillos and a potential risk of human infection with TcIII. Our study reinforces the importance of dogs and cats as domestic reservoir hosts and sources of various DTUs infecting humans, and suggests a link between dogs and the sylvatic transmission cycle of TcIII.


Assuntos
Doenças do Gato/parasitologia , Doença de Chagas/veterinária , Doenças do Cão/parasitologia , População Rural , Trypanosoma cruzi/classificação , Trypanosoma cruzi/genética , Animais , Argentina/epidemiologia , Doenças do Gato/epidemiologia , Doenças do Gato/transmissão , Gatos , Doença de Chagas/epidemiologia , Doença de Chagas/parasitologia , Doença de Chagas/transmissão , Reservatórios de Doenças/parasitologia , Doenças do Cão/epidemiologia , Doenças do Cão/transmissão , Cães , Humanos , Insetos Vetores/parasitologia , Triatoma/parasitologia , Trypanosoma cruzi/isolamento & purificação , Xenodiagnóstico
5.
Acta Trop ; 124(1): 79-86, 2012 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22771688

RESUMO

Little is known about the sylvatic transmission cycle of Trypanosoma cruzi in the Gran Chaco ecoregion. We conducted surveys to identify the main sylvatic hosts of T. cruzi, parasite discrete typing units and vector species involved in Pampa del Indio, a rural area in the humid Argentinean Chaco. A total of 44 mammals from 14 species were captured and examined for infection by xenodiagnosis and polymerase chain reaction amplification of the hyper-variable region of kinetoplast DNA minicircles of T. cruzi (kDNA-PCR). Ten (22.7%) mammals were positive by xenodiagnosis or kDNA-PCR. Four of 11 (36%) Didelphis albiventris (white-eared opossums) and six of nine (67%) Dasypus novemcinctus (nine-banded armadillos) were positive by xenodiagnosis and or kDNA-PCR. Rodents, other armadillo species, felids, crab-eating raccoons, hares and rabbits were not infected. Positive animals were highly infectious to the bugs that fed upon them as determined by xenodiagnosis. All positive opossums were infected with T. cruzi I and all positive nine-banded armadillos with T. cruzi III. Extensive searches in sylvatic habitats using 718 Noireau trap-nights only yielded Triatoma sordida whereas no bug was collected in 26 light-trap nights. Four armadillos or opossums fitted with a spool-and-line device were successfully tracked to their refuges; only one Panstrongylus geniculatus was found in an armadillo burrow. No sylvatic triatomine was infected with T. cruzi by microscopical examination or kDNA-PCR. Our results indicate that two independent sylvatic transmission cycles of T. cruzi occur in the humid Chaco. The putative vectors of both cycles need to be identified conclusively.


Assuntos
Doença de Chagas/parasitologia , Doença de Chagas/veterinária , Reservatórios de Doenças , Vetores de Doenças , Trypanosoma cruzi/isolamento & purificação , Trypanosoma cruzi/patogenicidade , Animais , Animais Selvagens , Argentina , Doença de Chagas/transmissão , DNA de Cinetoplasto/química , DNA de Cinetoplasto/genética , DNA de Protozoário/química , DNA de Protozoário/genética , Humanos , Umidade , Estágios do Ciclo de Vida , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , População Rural , Análise de Sequência de DNA
6.
Acta Trop ; 103(3): 201-11, 2007 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17686448

RESUMO

The relative impact of two community-based vector control strategies on house infestation by Triatoma infestans and Trypanosoma cruzi infection in bugs, domestic dogs and cats was assessed in two neighboring rural areas comprising 40 small villages and 323 houses in one of the regions most endemic for Chagas disease in northern Argentina. The prevalence and abundance of domestic infestation were 1.5- and 6.5-fold higher, respectively, in the area under pulsed, non-supervised control actions operating under the guidelines of the National Vector Control Program (NCVP) than in the area under sustained, supervised surveillance carried out jointly by the UBA research team and NCVP. The prevalence of infestation and infection varied widely among village groups within each area. In the pulsed control area, the prevalence of infection in bugs, dogs and cats was two- to three-fold higher than in the area under sustained surveillance, most of the infected animals qualified as autochthonous cases, and evidence of recent transmission was observed. Infection was highly aggregated at the household level and fell close to the 80/20 rule. Using multiple logistic regression analysis clustered by household, infection in dogs was associated positively and significantly with variables reflecting local exposure to infected T. infestans, thus demonstrating weak performance of the vector surveillance system. For high-risk areas in the Gran Chaco region, interruption of vector-mediated domestic transmission of T. cruzi requires residual insecticide spraying that is more intense, of a higher quality and sustained in time, combined with community participation and environmental management measures.


Assuntos
Doenças do Gato/parasitologia , Doença de Chagas/prevenção & controle , Controle de Doenças Transmissíveis/métodos , Doenças do Cão/parasitologia , Insetos Vetores , Triatoma/parasitologia , Animais , Argentina/epidemiologia , Doenças do Gato/epidemiologia , Doenças do Gato/prevenção & controle , Gatos , Doença de Chagas/epidemiologia , Doença de Chagas/veterinária , Infecções Comunitárias Adquiridas/prevenção & controle , Doenças do Cão/epidemiologia , Doenças do Cão/prevenção & controle , Cães , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Prevalência
7.
Acta Trop ; 98(3): 286-96, 2006 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16839513

RESUMO

Long-term variations in the dynamics and intensity of sylvatic transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi were investigated around eight rural villages in the semiarid Argentine Chaco in 2002-2004 and compared to data collected locally in 1984-1991. Of 501 wild mammals from 13 identified species examined by xenodiagnosis, only 3 (7.9%) of 38 Didelphis albiventris opossums and 1 (1.1%) of 91 Conepatus chinga skunks were infected by T. cruzi. The period prevalence in opossums was four-fold lower in 2002-2004 than in 1984-1991 (32-36%). The infection prevalence of skunks also decreased five-fold from 4.1-5.6% in 1984-1991 to 1.1% in 2002-2004. Infection in opossums increased with age and from summer to spring in both study periods. The force of infection per 100 opossum-months after weaning declined more than six-fold from 8.2 in 1988-1991 to 1.2 in 2002-2004. Opossums were mainly infected by T. cruzi lineage I and secondarily by lineage IId in 1984-1991, and only by T. cruzi I in 2002-2004; skunks were infected by T. cruzi IId in 1984-1991 and by IIc in 2002-2004. The striking decline of T. cruzi infection in opossums and skunks occurred in parallel to community-wide insecticide spraying followed by selective sprays leading to very low densities of infected Triatoma infestans in domestic and peridomestic habitats since 1992; to massive deforestation around one of the villages or selective extraction of older trees, and apparent reductions in opossum abundance jointly with increases in foxes and skunks. These factors may underlie the dramatic decrease of T. cruzi infection in wild reservoir hosts.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Animais/epidemiologia , Doença de Chagas/veterinária , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Mamíferos/parasitologia , Árvores , Trypanosoma cruzi/isolamento & purificação , Doenças dos Animais/parasitologia , Animais , Argentina , Doença de Chagas/epidemiologia
8.
Int Migr ; 25(2): 141-64, 1987 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12159544

RESUMO

PIP: This paper presents an overview of the diversity in character among the various Hispanic-American subgroups. The author compares the following subgroups historically and demographically: Mexican-Americans, Cuban-Americans, Mainland Puerto-Ricans, and "other" Hispanics. As a group, Hispanic-Americans lag far behind the majority population in any array of standard educational measurements. 40% of Hispanic-American students leave school before 10th grade. Children of "immigrant" minorities, such as Chinese, Japanese, and South and Central Americans, tend to do better in school than "caste-like" minorities, such as Black Americans, Mainland Puerto-Ricans and Mexican-Americans in the US. The author discusses several models which explain why Mexican and Puerto-Rican Americans fail in American schools at such high rates: 1) culture of poverty, 2) the various schools emphasizing "discontinuity" between the minority Hispanic and the majority culture, and 3) the psychosocial approach. Features which differentiate immigrants from caste-like minorities include 1) caste-like minorities were incorporated into the society against their will, whereas historically, immigrant minorities choose more or less freely to leave their country to enter a new social order; and 2) immigrants may anticipate or fantasize that in the future they will return home to enjoy the fruits of their hard work in the foreign land. 2 factors alleviate the longterm effects of the hardships and discrimination immigrants face: 1) the levels of discrimination became less evident as accents disappeared and names were Anglicized; immigrants develop a dual frame of reference, enabling them to evaluate their current reality against the reality of life back home; and 3) hard work in the new land will at the very least benefit the children in the future. Factors which veto the Mexican immigrant case as a heurstically "paradiomatic" immigrant minority include: 1) many Mexicans still resent the loss of 1/3 or Mexico's territories to Anglo colonists, 2) Americans still treat Mexican immigrants as a "case-like" minority despite the fact that they are immigrants, and 3) many of the "immigrants" lack official immigrant status.^ieng


Assuntos
Comparação Transcultural , Cultura , Escolaridade , Etnicidade , Hispânico ou Latino , Grupos Minoritários , Pesquisa , Classe Social , Fatores Socioeconômicos , Migrantes , América , Demografia , Países Desenvolvidos , Países em Desenvolvimento , Economia , Emigração e Imigração , América do Norte , População , Características da População , Dinâmica Populacional , Estados Unidos , Humanos
9.
Eur J Biochem ; 158(2): 367-72, 1986 Jul 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3732273

RESUMO

An acid ribonuclease has been purified from the insect Ceratitis capitata. The specific activity of the purified enzyme is 580 units/mg. This enzyme is a single polypeptide chain of about 35.5 kDa, containing only one disulfide bridge and no free -SH groups. The A0.1%1cm at 280 nm is 1.90. The hydrodynamic radius of the native enzyme is 2.5 nm. The secondary structure of this RNase is composed of 10% alpha-helix, 31% beta-structure and 59% aperiodic conformation with an average number of residues per helical segment of 10, based on circular dichroic measurements. Optimum parameters for the enzyme activity are pH 5.5, 0.15 M ionic strength and 40 degrees C. Divalent cations are not required for the enzymic catalysis. This enzyme has been characterized as cyclizing endoribonuclease.


Assuntos
Insetos/enzimologia , Ribonucleases/análise , Aminoácidos/análise , Animais , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Peso Molecular , Conformação Proteica , Ribonucleases/isolamento & purificação , Análise Espectral
10.
Int J Biochem ; 18(3): 229-33, 1986.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2420655

RESUMO

The kinetic and the specificity of two RNases purified from the insect. C. capitata have been studied. These two enzymes exhibit preference to degrade large polynucleotides. The alkaline enzyme is located in the soluble cellular fraction and the acid enzyme is also associated to microsomes and lysosomes. A hypothesis about the physiological role of these two insect enzymes in the degradation of the intracellular RNA is proposed.


Assuntos
Dípteros/enzimologia , RNA/metabolismo , Ribonucleases/metabolismo , Animais , Dípteros/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Cinética , Larva , Ribonucleases/isolamento & purificação
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