Pathophysiological variability of different genotypes of human Blastocystis hominis Egyptian isolates in experimentally infected rats
Autor: | Abdalla M. Hussein, Maha M Atwa, Mohamed M Eida, Eman M Hussein |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2008 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Cell Membrane Permeability Genotype Blastocystis Infections Lobosea Gastroenterology Asymptomatic law.invention Medical microbiology law Internal medicine Prevalence medicine Animals Humans Blastocystis hominis Intestinal Diseases Parasitic Intestinal Mucosa Rats Wistar Genotyping Polymerase chain reaction Blastocystis General Veterinary biology Genetic Variation General Medicine DNA Protozoan biology.organism_classification Virology Pathophysiology Rats Infectious Diseases Insect Science Egypt Parasitology medicine.symptom |
Zdroj: | Parasitology Research. 102:853-860 |
ISSN: | 1432-1955 0932-0113 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00436-007-0833-z |
Popis: | The genotyping of Blastocystis hominis clinical isolates obtained from 28 gastrointestinal symptomatic patients and 16 asymptomatic individuals were identified by polymerase chain reaction using sequenced-tagged site (STS) primers. Then, pathophysiological variability between different B. hominis genotypes was evaluated in experimentally infected rats. Only four B. hominis subtypes (1, 2, 3, and 4) were detected (18.2%, 9.1%, 54.5%, and 18.2%, respectively) in human isolates. In symptomatic isolates, subtypes 1, 3, and 4 were detected in 8 (28.6%), 16 (57.1%), and 4 (14.3%) patients, respectively. In asymptomatic isolates, subtypes 2, 3, and 4 were identified in 4 (25%), 8 (50%), and 4 (25%), respectively. Subtype 3 was the commonest in humans. Different degrees of pathological changes were found among infected rats by symptomatic subtypes compared with asymptomatic subtypes. The moderate and severe degrees of pathological changes were found only in symptomatic subtypes infected rats while mild degree was found only in asymptomatic subtypes infected rats. Only subtype 1 induced mortality rate with 25% among infected rats. On evaluation of the intestinal cell permeability in the Ussing chamber, a prominent increase in short circuit current (DeltaIsc) was found in symptomatic subtype 1 compared to symptomatic subtypes 3 and 4 infected rats. Minimal effects were found in the asymptomatic and control groups. The results proved that subtype 1 was clinically and statistically highly relevant to the pathogenicity of B. hominis while subtype 2 was irrelevant. Also, the results suggest the presence of pathogenic and nonpathogenic strains among subtypes 3 and 4. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |