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DNA from pre-erythrocytic stage malaria parasites is detectable by PCR in the faeces and blood of hosts

Authors :
Weimin Liu
Pedro Eduardo Ferreira
Beatrice H. Hahn
Nobuyuki Kobayashi
Richard Culleton
Ron P. Marchand
Richard Carter
Yoshimasa Maeno
Shusuke Nakazawa
Nguyen Tuyen Quang
Hussein M. Abkallo
Satoru Kawai
Michael A. Huffman
Sarina Hokama
Osamu Kaneko
Source :
International Journal for Parasitology. 44:467-473
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2014.

Abstract

Following the bite of an infective mosquito, malaria parasites first invade the liver where they develop and replicate for a number of days before being released into the bloodstream where they invade red blood cells and cause disease. The biology of the liver stages of malaria parasites is relatively poorly understood due to the inaccessibility of the parasites to sampling during this phase of their life cycle. Here we report the detection in blood and faecal samples of malaria parasite DNA throughout their development in the livers of mice and before the parasites begin their growth in the blood circulation. It is shown that parasite DNA derived from pre-erythrocytic stage parasites reaches the faeces via the bile. We then show that different primate malaria species can be detected by PCR in blood and faecal samples from naturally infected captive macaque monkeys. These results demonstrate that pre-erythrocytic parasites can be detected and quantified in experimentally infected animals. Furthermore, these results have important implications for both molecular epidemiology and phylogenetics of malaria parasites. In the former case, individuals who are malaria parasite negative by microscopy, but PCR positive for parasite DNA in their blood, are considered to be "sub-microscopic" blood stage parasite carriers. We now propose that PCR positivity is not necessarily an indicator of the presence of blood stage parasites, as the DNA could derive from pre-erythrocytic parasites. Similarly, in the case of molecular phylogenetics based on DNA sequences alone, we argue that DNA amplified from blood or faeces does not necessarily come from a parasite species that infects the red blood cells of that particular host.

Details

ISSN :
00207519
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal for Parasitology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....92833b63b4818c0b0ed444b44e5f9289
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2014.03.002