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Tsetse fly saliva: Could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts

Sleeping sickness and nagana are two important diseases cuased by African trypanosomes in humans and animals respectively, in tropical african countries. A number of trypanosome species are implicated in these diseases, but it is the Trypanosoma brucei group that is responsible for the chronic form...

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Autor principal: Awuoche, E.O.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Tripoli and Libyan Authority for Research, Science and Technology 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4655765/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26623300
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author Awuoche, E.O.
author_facet Awuoche, E.O.
author_sort Awuoche, E.O.
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description Sleeping sickness and nagana are two important diseases cuased by African trypanosomes in humans and animals respectively, in tropical african countries. A number of trypanosome species are implicated in these diseases, but it is the Trypanosoma brucei group that is responsible for the chronic form of sleeping sickness. During the course of this chronic infection the parasite shows a clear tropism for organs and tissues and only sporadically appears in the blood stream. Notwithstanding this feature, tsetse flies normally get infected from chronically infected apparasitemic hosts. For some pathogens like the microfilaria, it has already shown that the saliva of the vector, black fly saliva contribute to orient the pathogen to the site of the vector bite. Chemotaxis of tsetse saliva may perhaps stimulate movement of Trypanosoma brucei parasites from tissues to the bloodstream and via the vascular to the tsetse feeding site, and could explain the relatively high infection rate of tsetse flies feeding on chronically infected animals. This review paper looks into the possible role of trypanosome-vector saliva in ensuring parasite acquisition and its application in the tsetse – trypanosome interaction at the host skin interphase.
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spelling pubmed-46557652015-11-30 Tsetse fly saliva: Could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts Awuoche, E.O. Open Vet J Review Article Sleeping sickness and nagana are two important diseases cuased by African trypanosomes in humans and animals respectively, in tropical african countries. A number of trypanosome species are implicated in these diseases, but it is the Trypanosoma brucei group that is responsible for the chronic form of sleeping sickness. During the course of this chronic infection the parasite shows a clear tropism for organs and tissues and only sporadically appears in the blood stream. Notwithstanding this feature, tsetse flies normally get infected from chronically infected apparasitemic hosts. For some pathogens like the microfilaria, it has already shown that the saliva of the vector, black fly saliva contribute to orient the pathogen to the site of the vector bite. Chemotaxis of tsetse saliva may perhaps stimulate movement of Trypanosoma brucei parasites from tissues to the bloodstream and via the vascular to the tsetse feeding site, and could explain the relatively high infection rate of tsetse flies feeding on chronically infected animals. This review paper looks into the possible role of trypanosome-vector saliva in ensuring parasite acquisition and its application in the tsetse – trypanosome interaction at the host skin interphase. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Tripoli and Libyan Authority for Research, Science and Technology 2012 2012-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4655765/ /pubmed/26623300 Text en Copyright: © Open Veterinary Journal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Open Veterinary Journal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Review Article
Awuoche, E.O.
Tsetse fly saliva: Could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts
title Tsetse fly saliva: Could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts
title_full Tsetse fly saliva: Could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts
title_fullStr Tsetse fly saliva: Could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts
title_full_unstemmed Tsetse fly saliva: Could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts
title_short Tsetse fly saliva: Could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts
title_sort tsetse fly saliva: could it be useful in fly infection when feeding in chronically aparasitemic mammalian hosts
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4655765/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26623300
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