4.5 Article

Molecular epidemiology of domestic and sylvatic Trypanosoma cruzi infection in rural northwestern Argentina

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR PARASITOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 13, Pages 1533-1543

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2008.04.010

Keywords

Chagas disease; Lineage; Trypanosoma cruzi; Triatoma infestans; Dogs; Cats; Surveillance; Vector control

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Science Foundation Ecology of Infectious Disease program [R01 TW05836]
  2. Fogarty International Centre
  3. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
  4. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica (Argentina)
  5. University of Buenos Aires

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Genetic diversity of Trypanosoma cruzi populations and parasite transmission dynamics have been well documented throughout the Americas, but few studies have been conducted in the Gran Chaco ecoregion, one of the most highly endemic areas for Chagas disease, caused by T cruzi. In this study, we assessed the distribution of T cruzi lineages (identified by PCR strategies) in Triatoma infestans, domestic dogs, cats. humans and sylvatic mammals from two neighbouring rural areas with different histories of transmission and vector control in northern Argentina. Lineage II predominated amongst the 99 isolates characterised and lineage I amongst the six isolates obtained from sylvatic mammals. T cruzi lineage lie predominated in domestic habitats; it was found in 87%, of 54 isolates from Tr. infestans. in 82% of 33 isolates from dogs, and in the four cats found infected. Domestic and sylvatic cycles overlapped in the study area in the late 1980s, when intense domestic transmission occurred, and still overlap marginally. The introduction of T. cruzi from sylvatic into domestic habitats is likely to occur very rarely in the current epidemiological context. The household distribution of T cruzi lineages showed that Tr infestans, dogs and cats from a given house compound shared the same parasite lineage in most cases. Based on molecular evidence, this result lends further Support to the importance of dogs and cats as domestic reservoir hosts of T cruzi. We believe that in Argentina, this is the first time that lineage IIe has been isolated from naturally infected domestic dogs and Tr. infestans. (C) 2008 Australian Society for Parasitology Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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