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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Serotyping was previously described as a promising method for typing strains of
Toxoplasma gondii. The majority of precedent studies utilized serum samples collected
from human patients with different T. gondii-associated pathologies. The aim of this work
was to study the applicability of the same procedure for serotyping naturally infected
meat-producing animals. An ELISA test based on GRA6 and GRA7 C-terminal polymorphic
peptides was used. Peptide GRA6II has polymorphisms specific for the archetypal strains
type II, GRA6I/III for strains type I and III, GRA7I for strains type I and GRA7III for strains
type III. As reference material, and to validate this approach, serum samples from eleven
free-range chickens and fifteen pigs used for Toxoplasma genotypes isolation were
selected. These strains integrate the Biological Resource Centre (BRC) ToxoBS Bank. Three
serum samples from chickens and two from pigs had serotyping results in agreement with
genotyping. Thirty-five serum samples from chickens, twenty-nine from pigs and fifty
from sheep, seropositive for T. gondii, from which no isolate was obtained, were also
serotyped. Serotype III appeared significantly more frequent among sheep. Our results
show that serotyping still need refinement, but may become a valuable tool for typing
Toxoplasma strains from animal origin.
Description
Keywords
Toxoplasma gondii Serotyping Meat-producing-animals Infecções Sistémicas e Zoonoses
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Vet Parasitol. 2010 Apr 19;169(1-2):24-8. Epub 2009 Dec 28
