7 research outputs found
Proteomic Analysis of Fractionated Toxoplasma Oocysts Reveals Clues to Their Environmental Resistance
Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite that is unique in its ability to infect a broad range of birds and mammals, including humans, leading to an extremely high worldwide prevalence and distribution. This work focuses on the environmentally resistant oocyst, which is the product of sexual replication in felids and an important source of human infection. Due to the difficulty in producing and working with oocysts, relatively little is known about how this stage is able to resist extreme environmental stresses and how they initiate a new infection, once ingested. To fill this gap, the proteome of the wall and sporocyst/sporozoite fractions of mature, sporulated oocysts were characterized using one-dimensional gel electrophoresis followed by LC-MS/MS on trypsin-digested peptides. A combined total of 1021 non-redundant T. gondii proteins were identified in the sporocyst/sporozoite fraction and 226 were identified in the oocyst wall fraction. Significantly, 172 of the identified proteins have not previously been identified in Toxoplasma proteomic studies. Among these are several of interest for their likely role in conferring environmental resistance including a family of small, tyrosine-rich proteins present in the oocyst wall fractions and late embryogenesis abundant domain-containing (LEA) proteins in the cytosolic fractions. The latter are known from other systems to be key to enabling survival against desiccation
Toxoplasma in Animals, Food, and Humans: An Old Parasite of New Concern
All hosts, including humans, can be infected by any one of the three forms of the parasite Toxoplasma gondii that
correspond to three morphological stages: tachyzoite, bradyzoite, and sporozoite form. Felids are definitive
hosts for T. gondii, which is an intracellular pathogen that infects a wide range of warm-blooded intermediate
hosts. Toxoplasmosis is a disease where the interest of the diverse medical and veterinary specialties converge.
Awareness needs to be increased that toxoplasmosis can induce clinical disease not only in immunocompromised
patients or through congenital infections, but also in healthy patients. This is a review article that aims at
illustrating why toxoplasmosis should be regarded a veterinary public health issue and how veterinary practitioners
can contribute in controlling the infection.http://www.liebertpub.com/products/product.aspx?pid=108mn201