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Minimal infectious dose and dynamics of Babesia microti parasitemia in a murine model

Authors :
Sonia, Bakkour
Daniel M, Chafets
Li, Wen
Marcus O, Muench
Sam R, Telford
James L, Erwin
Andrew E, Levin
Deanna, Self
Vanessa, Brès
Jeffrey M, Linnen
Tzong-Hae, Lee
Michael P, Busch
Source :
Transfusion. 58(12)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Babesia microti is a parasite that infects red blood cells (RBCs) in mammals. It is transmitted to humans by tick bites, transfusion, organ transplantation, and congenital acquisition. Although the Babesia natural history and seroprevalence in donors have been well described, gaps in knowledge relevant to transfusion remain.Mice were infected with dilutions of parasitized blood to address the minimal infectious dose and the kinetics of parasitemia by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) and of antibodies by enzyme immunoassay.In immunocompetent DBA/2 mice infected with 100 parasitized RBCs (pRBCs) and in immunodeficient NSG mice infected with 63 pRBCs, parasitemia was detectable in five of five mice each. Peak parasitemia up to 2 × 10The mice in this study were highly susceptible to Babesia infection using as few as 1 to 2 log pRBCs and maintained chronic parasitemia. If the infectious dose in human transfusion recipients is comparably low, a highly sensitive assay targeting parasite RNA may safeguard the blood supply, particularly before antibody detection.

Details

ISSN :
15372995
Volume :
58
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transfusion
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........fe52da13bc3cc202c05b19e6f0c57ae5