1. Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense: characterisation of stocks from Zambia, Kenya, and Uganda using repetitive DNA probes.
- Author
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Hide G, Buchanan N, Welburn S, Maudlin I, Barry JD, and Tait A
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Evolution, Blotting, Southern, Cattle, Cluster Analysis, DNA Probes, Goats parasitology, Kenya, Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid, Swine parasitology, Trypanosoma brucei brucei genetics, Trypanosoma brucei brucei isolation & purification, Trypanosomiasis, African veterinary, Trypanosomiasis, Bovine parasitology, Tsetse Flies parasitology, Uganda, Zambia, DNA, Protozoan analysis, DNA, Ribosomal analysis, Trypanosoma brucei brucei classification, Trypanosomiasis, African parasitology
- Abstract
We have previously described a system for characterising the relationships between trypanosome stocks of the T.brucei group based on Southern blotting with repetitive DNA probes followed by cluster analysis of resultant banding patterns (G. Hide et al. Molec. Bioch. Parasitol. 39, 213-226, 1990). In this study, we extend this analysis to examine the relationships between trypanosome stocks isolated from major sleeping sickness foci in Zambia, Kenya, and Uganda. We show that the trypanosome strains responsible for disease in Zambia are quite distinct from those sampled from the Kenya/Uganda foci. Furthermore, the human serum resistant stocks isolated from the Kenya/Uganda foci which were isolated from man (or from animals) were found to form a tight group in the cluster analysis, while stocks isolated from nonhuman sources in the same area or stocks from elsewhere were found in separate groups. Thus, the human infective trypanosome strains found in these foci may have common origins and have, perhaps, arisen by clonal selection from a common source.
- Published
- 1991
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