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Isolation of Toxoplasma gondii in cell culture: an alternative to bioassay.

Authors :
Dawant, Tania
Wang, Wei
Spriggs, Maria
Magela de Faria Junior, Geraldo
Horton, Laura
Szafranski, Nicole M.
Waap, Helga
Jokelainen, Pikka
Gerhold, Richard W.
Su, Chunlei
Source :
International Journal for Parasitology. Mar2024, Vol. 54 Issue 3/4, p131-137. 7p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

[Display omitted] • We reviewed the literature on isolation of Toxoplasma gondii directly in cell culture. • Four experiments were reported to isolate T. gondii from different animals in Vero and HFF cell cultures. • We recommend an in vitro protocol to isolate T. gondii. • This method is simpler, more cost-effective, ethically more acceptable, and less time-sensitive. Toxoplasma gondii is an apicomplexan protozoan parasite that can infect mammals and birds. The infection can cause acute toxoplasmosis and death in susceptible hosts. Bioassay using cats and mice has been the standard for the isolation of T. gondii from infected hosts for the past several decades. However, bioassay is labor-intensive, expensive, and involves using laboratory animals. To search alternative approaches and o work towards replacement of animal experiments, we summarized the key literature and conducted four experiments to isolate T. gondii in vitro by cell culture. A few heart tissue samples from animals with the highest antibody titers in a given collection were used for T. gondii isolation. These experiments included samples from five out of 51 wild ducks, four of 46 wild turkeys, six of 24 white-tailed deer, as well as from six kangaroos that had died with acute toxoplasmosis in a zoo. These experiments resulted in three isolates from five chronically infected wild ducks (60%), four isolates from four chronically infected wild turkeys (100%), one isolate from six chronically infected white-tailed deer (17%), and four isolates from six kangaroos with acute toxoplasmosis (67%). In addition, five isolates from the five chronically infected wild ducks were obtained by bioassay in mice, showing a 100% success rate, which is higher than the 60% rate by direct cell culture. These T. gondii isolates were successfully propagated in human foreskin fibroblast (HFF) or Vero cells, and genotyped by multilocus PCR-RFLP markers. The results showed that it is practical to isolate T. gondii directly in cell culture. Although the cell culture approach may not be as sensitive as the bioassay, it does provide an alternative that is simple, cost-effective, ethically more acceptable, and less time-sensitive to isolate T. gondii. In this paper we propose a procedure that may be applied and further optimized for isolation of T. gondii. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00207519
Volume :
54
Issue :
3/4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal for Parasitology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176066650
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2023.12.002