eWe report on the in vitro effects of the bumped kinase inhibitor 1294 (BKI-1294) in cultures of virulent Neospora caninum isolates Nc-Liverpool (Nc-Liv) and Nc-Spain7 and in two strains of Toxoplasma gondii (RH and ME49), all grown in human foreskin fibroblasts. In these parasites, BKI-1294 acted with 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC 50 s) ranging from 20 nM (T. gondii RH) to 360 nM (N. caninum Nc-Liv), and exposure of intracellular stages to 1294 led to the nondisjunction of newly formed tachyzoites, resulting in the formation of multinucleated complexes similar to complexes previously observed in BKI-1294-treated N. caninum beta-galactosidase-expressing parasites. However, such complexes were not seen in a transgenic T. gondii strain that expressed CDPK1 harboring a mutation (G to M) in the gatekeeper residue. In T. gondii ME49 and N. caninum NcLiv, exposure of cultures to BKI-1294 resulted in the elevated expression of mRNA coding for the bradyzoite marker BAG1. Unlike in bradyzoites, SAG1 expression was not repressed. Immunofluorescence also showed that these multinucleated complexes expressed SAG1 and BAG1 and the monoclonal antibody CC2, which binds to a yet unidentified bradyzoite antigen, also exhibited increased labeling. In a pregnant mouse model, BKI-1294 efficiently inhibited vertical transmission in BALB/c mice experimentally infected with one of the two virulent isolates Nc-Liv or Nc-Spain7, demonstrating proof of concept that this compound protected offspring from vertical transmission and disease. The observed deregulated antigen expression effect may enhance the immune response during BKI-1294 therapy and will be the subject of future studies. N eospora caninum is a cyst-forming apicomplexan parasite that is closely related to Toxoplasma gondii but exhibits distinct differences in transmission patterns, virulence, host specificity, immunogenetic aspects, and the pathology it induces. T. gondii causes toxoplasmosis in humans and many domestic and wildlife animals, with great economic impact especially in sheep but also in many other animal species (1). Human toxoplasmosis causes serious pathology in immune-suppressed individuals. In addition, if a seronegative mother acquires primary infection during pregnancy, human toxoplasmosis can lead to abortion, microcephalus and hydrocephalus, and other fetal abnormalities causing intellectual disability (2). N. caninum is a veterinary health problem and represents one of the most important infectious causes of bovine abortion, stillbirth, and the birth of weak calves, with an economic impact of over $1.3 billion (3-5). In addition, N. caninum causes neuromuscular disease in dogs, and neosporosis has also been detected in a wide range of other species of livestock and wild animals worldwide.Despite their differences, an important common feature of these parasites is their ability to invade and replicate within a wide range of cell types and tissues, where they reside in an intracellular parasitophorous vacuole, surrounded by a parasitophorous vacuole me...
An indirect ELISA based on a soluble extract of Besnoitia besnoiti tachyzoites was developed and standardised. A set of positive and negative reference bovine sera were characterised using an immunofluorescence antibody test and Western blot. A cut-off with a relative index per cent of 8.1 was determined for equal sensitivity and specificity (100 per cent) by two-graph receiver operating characteristic analysis. Cross-reactions with other closely related Apicomplexan parasites were discarded. The standardised ELISA was then used during an outbreak of bovine besnoitiosis in a mountainous area of central Spain. The outbreak occurred in nine herds, and 358 animals that shared grazing lands during the summer season were affected. Clinical examination and blood sampling were carried out for all animals, and skin biopsies were obtained from animals with skin lesions. The confirmatory diagnosis was carried out by means of the indirect ELISA, together with the identification of tissue cysts by microscopy. Most of the animals were seropositive (90.5 per cent), but only 43 per cent of seropositive cattle developed clinical signs compatible with besnoitiosis. Additionally, a significant increase in seroprevalence and clinical signs was found to be associated with the increasing age of the animals, suggesting rapid horizontal transmission of the disease.
Toxoplasma gondii is an apicomplexan parasite that infects almost all warm-blooded animals. Little is known about how the parasite virulence in mice extrapolates to other relevant hosts. In the current study, in vitro phenotype and in vivo behavior in mice and sheep of a type II T. gondii isolate (TgShSp1) were compared with the reference type II T. gondii isolate (TgME49). The results of in vitro assays and the intraperitoneal inoculation of tachyzoites in mice indicated an enhanced virulence for the laboratory isolate, TgME49, compared to the recently obtained TgShSp1 isolate. TgShSp1 proliferated at a slower rate and had delayed lysis plaque formation compared to TgME49, but it formed more cyst-like structures in vitro. No mortality was observed in adult mice after infection with 1–105 tachyzoites intraperitoneally or with 25–2,000 oocysts orally of TgShSp1. In sheep orally challenged with oocysts, TgME49 infection resulted in sporadically higher rectal temperatures and higher parasite load in cotyledons from ewes that gave birth and brain tissues of the respective lambs, but no differences between these two isolates were found on fetal/lamb mortality or lesions and number of T. gondii-positive lambs. The congenital infection after challenge at mid-pregnancy with TgShSp1, measured as offspring mortality and vertical transmission, was different depending on the challenged host. In mice, mortality in 50% of the pups was observed when a dam was challenged with a high oocyst dose (500 TgShSp1 oocysts), whereas in sheep infected with the same dose of oocysts, mortality occurred in all fetuses. Likewise, mortality of 9 and 27% of the pups was observed in mice after infection with 100 and 25 TgShSp1 oocysts, respectively, while in sheep, infection with 50 and 10 TgShSp1 oocysts triggered mortality in 68 and 66% of the fetuses/lambs. Differences in vertical transmission in the surviving offspring were only found with the lower oocyst doses (100% after infection with 10 TgShSp1 oocysts in sheep and only 37% in mice after infection with 25 TgShSp1 oocysts). In conclusion, virulence in mice of T. gondii type II isolates may not be a good indicator to predict the outcome of infection in pregnant sheep.
BKI-1294 and buparvaquone exert excellent activities against transplacental transmission in pregnant mice.
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