AI Article Synopsis

  • Chagas disease, caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, is prevalent in south Texas, posing a risk to outdoor-housed nonhuman primates, particularly cynomolgus macaques, due to exposure to insect vectors and wild mammalian reservoirs.
  • A study found an 8.5% prevalence of T. cruzi in cynomolgus macaques, with 23% of seropositive individuals testing negative for the parasite via real-time PCR, indicating potential discrepancies in diagnostic methods and suggesting infectious stages may not always be visible in tissues.
  • The presence of T. cruzi and associated autoimmune responses could complicate cardiac evaluations in preclinical studies, emphasizing the need for screening outdoor-housed primates

Article Abstract

Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease, is endemic in south Texas due to the abundant vector and wild small mammalian reservoir populations. This situation predisposes nonhuman primate colonies exposed to outdoor housing to infection from ingestion or bite of triatomid insects. Using a T. cruzi-specific real-time PCR and Trypanosome spp.-specific ELISA, we revealed a prevalence rate of 8.5% in a colony of outdoor-housed cynomolgus macaques. By using a discriminating kinetoplastid minicircle PCR, we eliminated the possibility of mixed prevalence with nonpathogenic trypanosomes and showed the ELISA results were specific for T. cruzi. In this study, we found an inverse relationship between antibody titers and circulating parasite load. Also, 23% of T. cruzi IgG ELISA-positive macaques were negative by real-time PCR. Furthermore, in a subset of infected macaques, cardiac tissue was infiltrated by inflammatory mononuclear cells and contained T. cruzi genomic and kinetoplast DNA despite lacking microscopic evidence of discrete parasite stages. In addition, 19% of the infected macaques had titers for cardiac troponin I autoantibody, which could contribute to autoimmune myocarditis or interfere with circulating troponin I measurements. These findings indicate the possibility of T. cruzi to interfere with the assessment of cardiac safety signals in preclinical toxicology and safety pharmacology studies and the necessity for prestudy screening for T. cruzi in outdoor-housed nonhuman primates from endemic areas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3784659PMC

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