Publications by authors named "Denise Anete Madureira Alvarenga"

Introduction: Zoonotic transmission is a challenge for the control and elimination of malaria. It has been recorded in the Atlantic Forest, outside the Amazon which is the endemic region in Brazil. However, only very few studies have assessed the antibody response, especially of IgM antibodies, in Neotropical primates (NP).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on Plasmodium simium, a malaria-causing parasite in Brazilian non-human primates (NHP), which poses a risk for human infections and challenges malaria elimination efforts.* -
  • Researchers analyzed blood samples from 35 NHP using quantitative PCR to measure specific parasite transcript levels, finding that 87.5% of samples confirmed P. simium infection with various rates of gametocyte presence.* -
  • This research establishes a molecular understanding of P. simium in NHP, highlighting low gametocyte counts in most carriers and the potential implications for malaria transmission dynamics.*
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Article Synopsis
  • Current malaria elimination strategies overlook the role of non-human primates (NHPs) in spreading Plasmodium vivax, which is less responsive to control methods.* -
  • Blood samples from free-living and captive Neotropical monkeys revealed a 4.4% infection rate of P. vivax, indicating that these animals can harbor the pathogen.* -
  • The findings highlight the need to understand how NHP infections could sustain malaria transmission in humans, suggesting that wildlife management should be included in malaria elimination plans.*
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Malaria is an acute febrile disease caused by a protozoan of the genus . Light microscopy (LM) is the gold standard for the diagnosis of malaria. Despite this method being rapid and inexpensive, it has a low limit of detection, which hampers the identification of low parasitemia infections.

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Background: Plasmodium simium, a malaria parasite of non-human primates (NHP), was recently shown to cause zoonotic infections in humans in Brazil. We sequenced the P. simium genome to investigate its evolutionary history and to identify any genetic adaptions that may underlie the ability of this parasite to switch between host species.

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Human malaria due to zoonotic transmission has been recorded in the Atlantic Forest, an extra-Amazonian area in Brazil, which are a challenge for malaria control. Naturally acquired humoral immune response against pre-erythrocytic and erythrocytic antigens of Neotropical primates (NP) was evaluated here to improve the knowledge about the exposure of those animals to the malaria transmission and support the identification of the potential reservoirs of the disease in the Atlantic Forest. Blood samples of 154 monkeys from three areas of the Atlantic Forest were used to identify IgG antibodies against peptides of the repeat region of the major pre-erythrocytic antigen, the circumsporozoite protein (CSP), of (PvCSP), (Pb/PmCSP), and (PfCSP) by ELISA.

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Zoonotic malaria poses a unique problem for malaria control. Autochthonous cases of human malaria in the Atlantic Forest have recently been attributed to Plasmodium simium, a parasite that commonly infects non-human primates in this Brazilian biome. However, due to its close similarity at both the morphological and molecular level to Plasmodium vivax, the diagnosis of P.

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Background: Malaria was eliminated from southern and southeastern Brazil over 50 years ago. However, an increasing number of autochthonous episodes attributed to Plasmodium vivax have recently been reported from the Atlantic Forest region of Rio de Janeiro state. As the P vivax-like non-human primate malaria parasite species Plasmodium simium is locally enzootic, we performed a molecular epidemiological investigation to determine whether zoonotic malaria transmission is occurring.

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Background: In Brazil, two species of Plasmodium have been described infecting non-human primates, Plasmodium brasilianum and Plasmodium simium. These species are morphologically, genetically and immunologically indistinguishable from the human Plasmodium malariae and Plasmodium vivax parasites, respectively. Plasmodium simium has been observed naturally infecting monkeys of the genera Alouatta and Brachyteles in a restricted area of the Atlantic Forest in the south and southeast regions of Brazil.

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