This study describes a successful Plasmodium vivax sporozoite infection in Aotus lemurinus griseimembra. Twenty-eight naive or previously infected monkeys, either splenectomized or spleen intact, were inoculated intravenously or subcutaneously with Plasmodium vivax sporozoites of the Salvador I strain or with two wild isolates (VCC-4 and VCC-5; Vivax-Cali-Colombia). The monkeys were successfully infected regardless of the parasite strain, spleen presence, or inoculation route and showed prepatent periods that ranged from 16 to 89 days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAotus lemurinus griseimembra is considered one of the best nonhuman primate species for malarial studies because of its susceptibility to infection by Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stages. However, reproducible transmission of infective P. falciparum sporozoites by mosquito inoculation has been difficult to achieve even in splenectomized monkeys.
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