Publications by authors named "Trape J"

One-hundred-and sixteen Senegalese Serere were typed for HLA antigens and compared with other ethnic groups in Gambia. We did not find significant differences (Fisher's exact test; P < 0.01) in the HLA antigens distribution between the Serere and Mandinka groups in Senegal and the Serere, Mandinka and Wolof in The Gambia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The level of spontaneous apoptosis in short-term lymphocyte cultures was evaluated in different human immunodeficiency virus-negative groups of either healthy control individuals or patients with clinical malaria. The mean percentage of spontaneous apoptosis found in patients during a malaria attack was significantly higher than in sex- and age-matched healthy controls. The healthy asymptomatic controls were individuals with different degrees of exposure to Plasmodium falciparum as reflected by their various mean levels of specific anti-P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In West Africa, tick-borne relapsing fever is due to the spirochete Borrelia crocidurae and its geographic distribution is classically limited to the Sahel and Saharan regions where the vector tick Alectorobius sonrai is distributed. We report results of epidemiologic investigations carried out in the Sudan savanna of Senegal where the existence of the disease was unknown. A two-year prospective investigation of a rural community indicated that 10% of the study population developed an infection during the study period.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Increasing resistance of Plasmodium falciparum to chloroquine and other antimalarials has been reported in Africa. Only fragmentary data are available for Senegal. Although combined chloroquine-proguanil is soon scheduled for released on the market, few studies have been published concerning the susceptibility of isolates to either drug.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In high endemicity areas, malaria is a chronic disease: examination of blood films reveals that up to half of the population, particularly children, harbour parasites at any one given time. The parasitological status of the remainder was addressed using the polymerase chain reaction, a technique 100 to 1000 times more sensitive than microscopy, on a series of samples from Dielmo, a holoendemic area of Senegal. Two-thirds of the microscopically negative individuals were found to harbour subpatent levels of Plasmodium falciparum, suggesting that more than 90% of the exposed population at any one time, i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tick-borne borreliosis in West Africa is classically considered a rare disease whose geographic distribution is limited to Saharan and Sahelian regions. We report results of epidemiological investigations which indicate that tick-borne borreliosis is endemic in all regions of Senegal north to the 13 degrees 30'N latitude and is a major cause of morbidity in these areas. Our findings indicate a considerable range extension for the vector tick Alectorobius sonrai and suggest that the persistence of Subsaharan drought is responsible for a large spread of tick-borne borreliosis in West Africa.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) typing technique, based on the amplification of polymorphic regions from the merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP-1) and MSP-2 Plasmodium falciparum genes, was used to characterize parasites collected in a longitudinal study of asymptomatic carriers of malaria parasites living in two distinct epidemiologic situations. Blood samples were collected from children and adults living in the village of Dielmo, Senegal, when malaria transmission was 3-6 infective bites/week/individual. For each individual, every sample collected at two-week intervals over a period of three months showed a specific PCR pattern.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Some informations about malaria transmission, which has until nox difficult to get, can be obtained thanks to the use of molecular biology tools, PCR mainly. In Senegal, we use that technique to solve two kinds of problems: -Identification of species of the Anopheles gambiae complex: PCR technique is useful compared to other diagnostic methods (chromosome pattern, DNA probes, etc.) because it enables quickly and simply identification of captured anopheles from the DNA contained in their legs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Genetic diversity of the merozoite surface antigen-2 gene of the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum has been analyzed in a Senegalese village where malaria is holoendemic. A cross-sectional survey of 65 residents was performed in 1992 during the high transmission season. Plasmodium falciparum was detected both by microscopy (77% positive samples) and DNA amplification using a single (29% or 38% positive samples, depending on the primers used) or nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (78% positive samples).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

From April 1990 to March 1992 a longitudinal entomological study was carried out in Dielmo village, Senegal, an area of Sudan-type savanna. Mosquitoes were sampled by night-bite collections and pyretnrum spray collections. Seven anopheles species were identified: An.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The 83-kilodalton (kD) apical membrane antigen of Plasmodium falciparum (PF83/AMA-1) is a potential asexual blood stage vaccine component. This antigen has been expressed as a full-length, nonfusion, recombinant baculovirus protein (PF83-7G8-1) using the authentic predicted signal peptide for appropriate postsynthetic routing. When purified by a novel high-performance, ion exchange chromatography (HPIEC) method, PF83-7G8-1 induced polyclonal antibodies in rats that immunoprecipitated both 83- and 66-kD forms of PF83/AMA-1 from 35S-methionine metabolically labeled parasite extracts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Dielmo project, initiated in 1990, consisted of long-term investigations on host-parasite relationships and the mechanisms of protective immunity in the 247 residents of a Senegalese village in which malaria is holoendemic. Anopheles gambiae s.l.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In a rural area in Sénégal with a high incidence of tick-borne relapsing fever in humans, Borrelia crocidurae was studied in the blood and brain of wild rodents (Mastomys erythroleucus, Arvicanthis niloticus and Rattus rattus) using 3 methods: (i) direct examination of thick blood films; (ii) intraperitoneal inoculation of blood into white mice; (iii) intraperitoneal inoculation of homogenized cerebral tissue into white mice. Of the 82 rodents examined, the proportion of infected animals was respectively 2.4%, 7.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report results of a longitudinal survey designed to determine the importance and the dynamics of Borrelia crocidurae, the spirochete responsible for tick-borne relapsing fever in West Africa in rodents and insectivores in a rural area of northern Senegal. A total of 954 animals were caught during bimonthly capture sessions over a two-year period. Positive thick blood smears were recorded in 17.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Twenty species of Anopheles are presently known from Senegal. An. gambiae, An.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The apical membrane antigen (AMA-1) family of malaria merozoite proteins is characterised by a high degree of inter-species conservation. Evidence that the protein (PK66/AMA-1) from the simian parasite Plasmodium knowlesi was protective in rhesus monkeys suggested that the 83kDa P. falciparum equivalent (PF83/AMA-1) should be investigated for protective effects in humans.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Crude merozoite antigens from P. falciparum were used to analyse the proliferative response of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 114 inhabitants of the village of Dielmo (Senegal, West Africa), who are exposed continuously to malaria transmission. The high or low responses to merozoite antigens obtained in lymphocyte stimulation assays were correlated to the presence or absence of parasites, to the IFN-gamma production and to the HLA-phenotype.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have investigated the immune response against the Plasmodium falciparum gametocyte-specific antigen Pf11-1. This megadalton parasite molecule has been implicated in the process of erythrocyte rupture during gametogenesis. The molecule is composed in great part of degenerated nonapeptide motifs which are tandemly repeated several hundred times.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To measure morbidity due to malaria and to study its relationship with transmission and parasitemia in children living in an area of low malaria endemicity, a cohort study of 343 schoolchildren was undertaken during a one-year period in Dakar, Senegal. From parallel investigations on transmission and the frequency of malaria as a cause for outpatient visits, three different seasons were chosen for close monitoring of different clinical parasitologic, and sero-immunologic parameters. The daily incidence rates of malaria parasitemia and primary attacks were at a maximum level during the high transmission season (0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In persons naturally exposed to high transmission, how significant, in terms of immune protection, is the occurrence or non-occurrence of a malaria attack during a given observation period? This question was studied in a West African village where Plasmodium falciparum malaria is holoendemic with intense and perennial transmission. A cohort of 94 children aged 4 months-14 years from Dielmo village, Sénégal, was studied over 4 months, June-September 1990. 41 children had no malaria attack and 53 children suffered between one and 6 attacks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF