scholarly journals Population genetics of Trypanosoma brucei circulating in Glossina palpalis palpalis and domestic animals of the Fontem sleeping sickness focus of Cameroon

2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gustave Simo ◽  
Guy Njitchouang ◽  
Tresor Tito Melachio ◽  
Flobert Njiokou ◽  
Gerard Cuny ◽  
...  
2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Trésor Melachio ◽  
Gustave Simo ◽  
Sophie Ravel ◽  
Thierry De Meeûs ◽  
Sandrine Causse ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 199-206
Author(s):  
J.M. Kazadi ◽  
P. Kageruka ◽  
Bertrand Losson ◽  
M. Jochems ◽  
J. Van Hees

La compétence vectorielle (CV) de Glossina palpalis palpalis (Mongo-Bemba, Zaïre) a été évaluée en nourrissant une seule fois 1 304 mouches ténérales sur un rat infecté avec Trypanosoma brucei brucei EATRO 1125. Les niveaux d'infection de l'intestin moyen, du proventricule et des glandes salivaires diffèrent significativement entre les sexes, mais non avec la longueur du jeûne entre les repas d'entretien. Chez les mouches nourries, par la suite, sur des rats non infectés, à intervalle de trois jours, la CV des mâles est significativement plus élevée que celle des femelles. La métacyclogenèse se traduit par l'invasion successive des trypomastigotes dans l'intestin moyen, le proventricule et les glandes salivaires. L'invasion parasitaire reste permanente dans chaque site colonisé.


This species was only met with on one occasion during the work of the Commission in 1909. This was in the blood of an ox from the Mabira Rubber Estate (latitude 0° 30′ N., longitude 32° 55′ E.). The manager wrote that the animal came from the Bukedi District, about 100 miles to the north (latitude 1° 50′ N., longitude 32° 40′ E.). Not much is known of this district, as it has only recently come under administration, and therefore it is impossible to say whether the ox was infected in Bukedi or on the journey south. This is the species of trypanosome which was first discovered by Bruce, in 1894, in Zululand, to be the cause of Nagana, or tsetse-fly disease. During the work of the Sleeping Sickness Commission of the Royal Society in 1903, it was also met with in a herd of cattle from the same district of Bukedi, and then described as the “Jinja trypanosome.” It is impossible to name with any certainty the trypanosome seen in 1903, which affected the horses, camels, and dogs of the Abyssinian Boundary Commission. This was described as the “Abyssinian trypanosome.” Its morphology, as given in the coloured plate, shows it to be similar to Trypanosoma brucei , so that in all likelihood it was either this species or the closely related Trypanosoma evansi . As camels were infected, it was more probably the latter.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucas J. Cunningham ◽  
Jessica K. Lingley ◽  
Iñaki Tirados ◽  
Johan Esterhuizen ◽  
Mercy A. Opiyo ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundLarge-scale control of sleeping sickness has led to a decline in the number of cases of Gambian human African trypanosomiasis (g-HAT) to <2000/year. However, achieving complete and lasting interruption of transmission may be difficult because animals may act as reservoir hosts for T. b. gambiense. Our study aims to update our understanding of T. b. gambiense in local vectors and domestic animals of N.W. Uganda.MethodsWe collected blood from 2896 cattle and 400 pigs and In addition, 6664 tsetse underwent microscopical examination for the presence of trypanosomes. Trypanosoma species were identified in tsetse from a subsample of 2184 using PCR. Primers specific for T. brucei s.l. and for T. brucei sub-species were used to screen cattle, pig and tsetse samples.ResultsIn total, 39/2,088 (1.9%; 95% CI=1.9-2.5) cattle, 25/400 (6.3%; 95% CI=4.1-9.1) pigs and 40/2,184 (1.8%; 95% CI=1.3-2.5) tsetse, were positive for T. brucei s.l.. Of these samples 24 cattle (61.5%), 15 pig (60%) and 25 tsetse (62.5%) samples had sufficient DNA to be screened using the T. brucei sub-species PCR. Further analysis found no cattle or pigs positive for T. b. gambiense, however, 17/40 of the tsetse samples produced a band suggestive of T. b. gambiense. When three of these 17 PCR products were sequenced the sequences were markedly different to T. b. gambiense, indicating that these flies were not infected with T. b. gambiense.ConclusionThe absence of T. b. gambiense in cattle, pigs and tsetse accords with the low prevalence of g-HAT in the human population. We found no evidence that livestock are acting as reservoir hosts. However, this study highlights the limitations of current methods of detecting and identifying T. b. gambiense which relies on a single copy-gene to discriminate between the different sub-species of T. brucei s.l.Author SummaryThe decline of annual cases of West-African sleeping sickness in Uganda raises the prospect that elimination of the disease is achievable for the country. However, with the decrease in incidence and the likely subsequent change in priorities there is a need to confirm that the disease is truly eliminated. One unanswered question is the role that domestic animals play in maintaining transmission of the disease. The potential of cryptic-animal reservoirs is a serious threat to successful and sustained elimination of the disease. It is with the intent of resolving this question that we have carried out this study whereby we examined 2088 cattle, 400 pigs and 2184 tsetse for Trypanosoma brucei gambiense, the parasite responsible for the disease. Our study found T. brucei s.l. in local cattle, pigs and tsetse flies, with their respective prevalences as follows, 1.9%, 6.3% and 1.8%. Further analysis to establish identity of these positives to the sub-species level found that no cattle, pigs or tsetse were carrying the pathogen responsible for Gambian sleeping sickness. Our work highlights the difficulty of establishing the absence of a disease, especially in an extremely low endemic setting, and the limitations of some of the most commonly used methods.


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