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1.
Acta Trop ; 220: 105970, 2021 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34033805

RESUMO

Sarcocystis neurona and Neospora spp. are related protozoa that can cause equine protozoal myeloencephalitis (EPM). The present study aimed to determine the frequency of antibodies to these parasites in 649 equids (351 horses, 267 donkeys, and 31 mules) from six departments in the North and Northwest of Colombia. For this purpose, the indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT) was used for detecting antibodies against S. neurona and Neospora spp. with a cut-off point of 1:20 and 1:50, respectively. A binomial logistic regression model was selected to predict variables associated with exposure. The frequency of anti-S. neurona antibodies was 14.24% (95% CI: 10.84-18.44) for horses, 2.99% (95% CI: 1.39-6.04) for donkeys, and 16.13% (95% CI: 6.09-34.47) for mules. The risk for S. neurona infection was significantly lower in donkeys (OR: 0.18 [0.08-0.38]; p<0.001) than horses and mules, and higher in animals with a poor body condition (OR: 2.82 [1.45-6.05]; p<0.05). Additionally, older animals (>12y) had a higher risk of seropositivity (OR: 5.26 [1.88-19.1]; p<0.05), as well as animals that inhabit climatic conditions associated with tropical very dry forest (OR: 1.85 [1.01-3.51]; p<0.05). Córdoba and Antioquia departments presented the highest seropositivity to S. neurona with 13.01 and 8.3%, respectively. The frequency of anti-Neospora spp. antibodies was 1.42% (95% CI: 0.52-3.48) for horses, 1.12% (95% CI:0.29-3.52) for donkeys and 0% (95%, CI: 0-0) for mules. Atlántico was the state with the highest seropositivity to Neospora spp. (10%). No risks associated with Neospora spp. infection were found. These findings allow us to conclude that equids from these regions of Colombia are exposed to S. neurona, but antibodies to Neospora spp. are uncommon. Further studies are necessary to explore the presence of these two agents in other areas of the country. In addition, we need to prove the importance of the above-mentioned risk factors over the susceptibility of horses to these protozoal agents and the epidemiological impact of these underdiagnosed coccidia.


Assuntos
Coccidiose/veterinária , Doenças dos Cavalos/epidemiologia , Neospora/fisiologia , Sarcocystis/fisiologia , Sarcocistose/veterinária , Animais , Coccidiose/epidemiologia , Colômbia , Equidae , Feminino , Cavalos , Masculino , Fatores de Risco , Sarcocistose/epidemiologia , Estudos Soroepidemiológicos
2.
Parasitol Int ; 76: 102098, 2020 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32120051

RESUMO

Sarcocistys -associated menigoencephalitis is virtually an unrecognized cause of neurological disease in chickens. An undescribed species of Sarcocystis cause fatal infection in two backyard chickens in the Midwest of Brazil. Infected chickens presented anorexia, weight loss, incoordination, ataxia and opisthotonos. Yellow necrotic foci in the gray and white matter of the telencephalon were the main gross lesion. Microscopically, necrotizing granulomatous and heterophilic meningoencephalitis with intralesional Sarcocystis -like schizonts and mezoites were observed in the central nervous system. Molecular analysis of frozen brain samples of the two chickens was identical and the protozoan was named Sarcocystis sp. Chicken-2016-DF-BR. Complete nested PCR- sequence of Sarcocystis sp. Chicken-2016-DF-BR was equally similar to Sarcocystis anasi (EU553477) and Sarcocystis albifronsi (EU502868). This is the first report of Sarcocistys -associated meningoencephalitis with molecular characterization in backyard chickens.


Assuntos
Galinhas , Meningoencefalite/veterinária , Doenças das Aves Domésticas/diagnóstico , Sarcocystis/classificação , Animais , Encéfalo/parasitologia , Encéfalo/patologia , Brasil , Feminino , Masculino , Meningoencefalite/diagnóstico , Meningoencefalite/parasitologia , Meningoencefalite/patologia , Necrose/diagnóstico , Necrose/parasitologia , Necrose/patologia , Necrose/veterinária , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/veterinária , Doenças das Aves Domésticas/parasitologia , Doenças das Aves Domésticas/patologia , Sarcocystis/fisiologia
3.
Parasitol Int ; 66(3): 214-218, 2017 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28163250

RESUMO

Several Sarcocystis spp. have carnivores as definitive host and sarcocysts are common in muscles of herbivores (intermediate host). However, sarcocysts have been found in muscles of wild and domestic carnivores suggesting they are intermediate host for some Sarcocystis spp. Here, we report mature sarcocysts in the muscles of Pampas fox (Lycalopex gymnocercus). A total of 36 free-living foxes were analyzed. Different skeletal muscles were assessed by microscopic and molecular methods. Cysts and/or DNA of Sarcocystis sp. were detected in 61.1% (22/36) foxes. Histopathology revealed the presence of sarcocysts in 52.8% (19/36) foxes. The tongue and masseter were the muscles more frequently infected. Of all the samples processed by homogenization of pooled muscles of each animal, 45.4% (10/22) evidenced muscle cysts and 68.2% (15/22) resulted positives by PCR. Individual cysts obtained from the ten positive samples in direct microscopic examination were all positive by PCR. Five amplicons from individual cysts from different samples were selected for sequencing together with four PCR products obtained from the pooled muscles. All nine sequences shared a high identity among them (99.8-100%) and showed the highest identity by BLAST (99%) with a S. svanai sequence (KM362428) from a North American dog. By transmission electron microscopy, the sarcocyst wall was thin (<1µm), had minute undulations, with tiny evaginations and without evident villar protrusions. The cyst wall type is referred as "type 1". Sarcocystis svanai infects L. gymnocercus with a high prevalence and the presence of mature sarcocysts suggests the role of the Pampas fox as natural intermediate host. The definitive host of S. svanai remains unknown.


Assuntos
Raposas/parasitologia , Músculo Esquelético/parasitologia , Sarcocystis/isolamento & purificação , Sarcocystis/fisiologia , Sarcocistose/veterinária , Animais , Raposas/anatomia & histologia , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão , Filogenia , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , RNA Ribossômico 18S/genética , Sarcocystis/genética , Sarcocystis/ultraestrutura , Sarcocistose/parasitologia , Sarcocistose/fisiopatologia , Sarcocistose/transmissão , América do Sul , Língua/parasitologia
4.
J Parasitol ; 98(6): 1262-5, 2012 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22571294

RESUMO

Nine opossums, Didelphis aurita , were captured in the city of Seropédica, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and examined for species of Sarcocystis. Sporocysts were observed in the mucosal scrapings of the small intestine from 3 opossums. Five budgerigars, Melopsittacus undulatus , were infected with sporocysts from each of these infected opossums and 5 budgerigars were used as controls. Of the 15 sporocyst-treated budgerigars, 5 birds that received sporocysts from 1 of the infected opossums developed tissue parasites. Meronts in the vascular endothelium of the lung venous capillaries and cysts in the skeletal and cardiac muscle cells were observed in histological sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin. The microscopic cysts, which were predominantly in the tongue and leg muscles, ranged from 65.3 to 118.1 µm in length and 14.0 to 29.4 µm in width and from 0.9 to 1.9 µm in thickness of the cystic wall. Sections examined by transmission electron microscopy revealed that the cyst wall contained numerous slender and jagged-shaped protrusions, each with a finger-like formation at the end. The morphology, especially of the cyst wall, and the morphometry of the tissue cysts indicate that the parasite is Sarcocystis lindsayi and, therefore, the opossum, D. aurita , is now considered a definitive host for this species in Brazil.


Assuntos
Doenças das Aves/parasitologia , Didelphis/parasitologia , Melopsittacus/parasitologia , Sarcocystis/fisiologia , Sarcocistose/veterinária , Animais , Brasil , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão/veterinária , Músculos/parasitologia , Oocistos/classificação , Oocistos/ultraestrutura , Sarcocystis/classificação , Sarcocystis/isolamento & purificação , Sarcocystis/ultraestrutura , Sarcocistose/parasitologia
5.
PLoS Genet ; 6(12): e1001261, 2010 Dec 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21203443

RESUMO

Tissue-encysting coccidia, including Toxoplasma gondii and Sarcocystis neurona, are heterogamous parasites with sexual and asexual life stages in definitive and intermediate hosts, respectively. During its sexual life stage, T. gondii reproduces either by genetic out-crossing or via clonal amplification of a single strain through self-mating. Out-crossing has been experimentally verified as a potent mechanism capable of producing offspring possessing a range of adaptive and virulence potentials. In contrast, selfing and other life history traits, such as asexual expansion of tissue-cysts by oral transmission among intermediate hosts, have been proposed to explain the genetic basis for the clonal population structure of T. gondii. In this study, we investigated the contributing roles self-mating and sexual recombination play in nature to maintain clonal population structures and produce or expand parasite clones capable of causing disease epidemics for two tissue encysting parasites. We applied high-resolution genotyping against strains isolated from a T. gondii waterborne outbreak that caused symptomatic disease in 155 immune-competent people in Brazil and a S. neurona outbreak that resulted in a mass mortality event in Southern sea otters. In both cases, a single, genetically distinct clone was found infecting outbreak-exposed individuals. Furthermore, the T. gondii outbreak clone was one of several apparently recombinant progeny recovered from the local environment. Since oocysts or sporocysts were the infectious form implicated in each outbreak, the expansion of the epidemic clone can be explained by self-mating. The results also show that out-crossing preceded selfing to produce the virulent T. gondii clone. For the tissue encysting coccidia, self-mating exists as a key adaptation potentiating the epidemic expansion and transmission of newly emerged parasite clones that can profoundly shape parasite population genetic structures or cause devastating disease outbreaks.


Assuntos
Surtos de Doenças , Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita , Sarcocystis/fisiologia , Sarcocistose/veterinária , Autofertilização , Toxoplasma/fisiologia , Toxoplasmose/parasitologia , Animais , Brasil/epidemiologia , Genótipo , Humanos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Oocistos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Oocistos/fisiologia , Lontras/parasitologia , Recombinação Genética , Sarcocystis/classificação , Sarcocystis/genética , Sarcocystis/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Sarcocistose/epidemiologia , Sarcocistose/parasitologia , Toxoplasma/classificação , Toxoplasma/genética , Toxoplasma/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Toxoplasmose/epidemiologia
6.
Vet Parasitol ; 165(3-4): 332-6, 2009 Nov 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19647370

RESUMO

Sarcocystis tenella is a dog-sheep protozoan parasite, causing a widespread enzootic muscle parasitosis and neurological disease mainly in lambs. This parasite is pathogenic to sheep and important to the economical production of sheep. The present study was initially aimed to determine Toxoplasma gondii infection and the occurrence of co-infection with other Apicomplexa parasites in 602 Brazilian sheep. Twenty of these sheep were positive with antibodies to T. gondii by MAT and IFAT-IgG tests, positive with PCR-RFLP genotyping at multiple loci, and parasites were isolated from mice infected with sheep tissue samples. Two additional sheep born in Brazil, a 2-year-old female Polwarth (Ideal) sheep, a breed originated from Australia (#1), and a 1-year-old male Corriedale sheep, a breed originated from New Zealand and Australia (#2) were positive to T. gondii antibodies by serum tests, and PCR, but negative for bioassay in mice. In genotyping at 12 loci, sheep #1 sample and #2 presented positive results only for some markers. PCR-RFLP of 18S ribosomal RNA (18S rRNA) was performed in all 22 animals to identify the possibility of co-infection of T. gondii with other Apicomplexa parasites, such as S. tenella, Neospora caninum and Hammondia hammondi, resulting in a T. gondii profile for the first 20 animals and a unique genotyping profile for sheep #1 and #2, identical to S. tenella. The 18S rRNA PCR products (approximately 310 bp) were sequenced and blasted to GenBank database at NCBI. Both samples were identical to S. tenella 18S rRNA gene (GenBank accession number L24383-1). These results suggest the existence of co-infection of S. tenella with T. gondii in ewes from Brazil.


Assuntos
Sarcocystis/fisiologia , Sarcocistose/veterinária , Doenças dos Ovinos/diagnóstico , Doenças dos Ovinos/parasitologia , Animais , Brasil , Feminino , Genótipo , Masculino , Camundongos , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , RNA Ribossômico 18S/genética , Sarcocystis/genética , Sarcocistose/diagnóstico , Sarcocistose/parasitologia , Ovinos
7.
Vet Parasitol ; 95(2-4): 133-42, 2001 Feb 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11223194

RESUMO

At least three species of Sarcocystis (S. neurona, S. falcatula, S. speeri) have recently been shown to use opossums of the genus Didelphis as their definitive host. In order to evaluate the evolutionary relationships among Sarcocystis spp. isolates from the Americas, and to determine whether organisms representing the same parasite lineages are transmitted north and south of the Panamanian isthmus, we inferred the phylogenetic relationships from nucleotide sequence variation in parasites isolated from three opossum species (D. virginiana, D. albiventris, D. marsupialis). In particular, we used variation in the 25/396 marker to compare several isolates from Brazil, Argentina, and the United States to each other and to cloned S. neurona and S. falcatula whose morphology and host affinities have been defined in the laboratory. S. neurona was identified from a Brazilian D. albiventris, as well as from North American D. virginiana. Parasites resembling the Cornell isolate of S. falcatula are transmitted both south and north of the Panamanian isthmus by D. albiventris and D. virginiana, respectively. Distinct attributes at two genetic loci differentiated a Brazilian isolate of S. falcatula from all other known parasite lineages. We confirm S. neurona as the causative agent of recently reported neurologic disease in Southern sea otters, Enhydra lutris nereis. And we found that S. speeri could not be compared to the other opossum-derived Sarcocystis isolates on the basis of nucleotide variation at the 25/396 locus. The widespread distribution of certain species of Sarcocystis may derive from their ability to parasitize migratory bird hosts in their intermediate stage.


Assuntos
Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita , Gambás/parasitologia , Sarcocystis/patogenicidade , Sarcocistose/veterinária , Animais , Argentina , Brasil , Cavalos/parasitologia , Lontras/parasitologia , Filogenia , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/veterinária , Polimorfismo de Fragmento de Restrição , Sarcocystis/fisiologia , Sarcocistose/transmissão , Aves Canoras/parasitologia , Especificidade da Espécie , Estados Unidos
8.
J Parasitol ; 86(1): 160-3, 2000 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10701583

RESUMO

Sarcocystis sporocysts from the intestines of 2 opossums (Didelphis albiventris) from Argentina were fed to gamma-interferon knockout (KO) and nude mice. Protozoal schizonts were seen in brain, liver, spleen, and adrenal glands of mice examined 33-64 days after feeding sporocysts. Sarcocysts were seen in skeletal muscles of KO mice 34-71 days after feeding sporocysts. Schizonts and sarcocysts were structurally similar to Sarcocystis speeri Dubey and Lindsay, 1999 seen in mice fed sporocysts from the North American opossum Didelphis virginiana from the United States.


Assuntos
Enteropatias Parasitárias/veterinária , Gambás/parasitologia , Sarcocystis/isolamento & purificação , Sarcocistose/veterinária , Animais , Argentina , Feminino , Cavalos , Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita , Enteropatias Parasitárias/parasitologia , Enteropatias Parasitárias/transmissão , Intestino Delgado/parasitologia , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos BALB C , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Camundongos Knockout , Camundongos Nus , Músculo Esquelético/parasitologia , Sarcocystis/fisiologia , Sarcocystis/ultraestrutura , Sarcocistose/parasitologia , Sarcocistose/transmissão
9.
Parasitology ; 121 Pt 6: 589-94, 2000 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11155929

RESUMO

The North American opossum, Didelphis virginiana, is a definitive host for at least 3 species of Sarcocvstis: S. falcatula Stiles 1983, S. neurona Dubey, Davis, Speer, Bowman, de Lahunta, Granstrom, Topper, Hamir, Cummings, Suter 1991, and S. speeri Dubey and Lindsay 1999. In order to identify species of Sarcocystis in the South American opossum, D. inarsupialis, Sarcocystis sporocysts from the intestines of a naturally infected opossum (D. marsupialis) from Brazil were fed to 4 gamma-interferon knockout (KO) mice, a nude mouse, and 2 budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus). All 4 KO mice became ill and 1 died 42 days post-feeding (p.f.) of sporocysts, 1 was killed 44 days p.f. because of neurological signs, and 2 were killed 52 and 53 days p.f. because of abnormal gaits. Numerous sarcocysts were seen in the skeletal muscles of all 4 KO mice and they were structurally identical to S. speeri seen in KO mice fed sporocysts from D. virginiana from the United States and D. albiventris from Argentina. The nude mouse was killed 41 days p.f. because it appeared weak; schizonts were seen in sections of its liver and sarcocysts were seen in sections of skeletal muscles. Sarcocystis speeri was cultured in bovine turbinate cells inoculated with liver homogenate from this mouse. Sarcocystis neurona was not demonstrable in tissues of mice. The two budgerigars remained asymptomatic and S. falcatula was not found in their tissues when they were killed 29 days p.i. This is the first report of S. speeri from D. marsupialis.


Assuntos
Gambás/parasitologia , Sarcocystis/fisiologia , Sarcocistose/veterinária , Animais , Doenças das Aves/imunologia , Doenças das Aves/parasitologia , Encéfalo/parasitologia , Brasil , Marcha , Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita , Imunidade Inata , Fígado/parasitologia , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Camundongos Knockout , Camundongos Nus , Microscopia Eletrônica , Músculo Esquelético/parasitologia , Papagaios/parasitologia , Sarcocystis/classificação , Sarcocystis/ultraestrutura , Sarcocistose/patologia
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