AI Article Synopsis

  • Paleoparasitology examines ancient parasite infections by analyzing remains in mummies, skeletons, and coprolites, but studies on certain infections like toxoplasmosis have been limited due to the parasite's complex life cycle.
  • The research created an experimental model to detect Toxoplasma gondii DNA from bones and skin, which are commonly found in archeological sites, demonstrating that both acute and chronic infection forms can be recovered from these materials.
  • The findings may address historical debates about the origin of T. gondii, and the methodology allows testing of dried samples even when ideal storage conditions aren't met.

Article Abstract

Paleoparasitology studies parasite infections by finding the parasites' remains in preserved organic remains such as natural or artificial mummy tissues, skeletons, teeth, and coprolites, among others. However, some currently important infections like toxoplasmosis have not been studied by paleoparasitology. The reasons include this parasite's complex life cycle, the resulting difficulties in locating this protozoan in the intermediate host tissues, and the limitation of coprolite studies to felines, the protozoan's definitive host. The current study thus aimed to produce an experimental model for molecular diagnosis of toxoplasmosis, prioritizing its study in bones and skin, the most abundant materials in archeological collections and sites. The study demonstrated the feasibility of recovering Toxoplasma gondii DNA from desiccated material, including bones and skin, in experimental models both with circulating tachyzoites (RH strain), characteristic of acute infection, and with cysts (ME49 cystogenic strain), characteristic of chronic infection. At present, most individuals with T. gondii infection are in the chronic phase, and the same was probably true in the past. The current study thus expands the odds of finding the parasite in archeological material, enhanced by the nature of the material in which the diagnosis was made. Finding the parasite may help answer questions that are widely debated in the literature on this protozoan's origin (Old World versus New World). In addition, when conditions do not allow ideal storage of samples for molecular tests, the methodology creates the possibility of testing oven-dried samples transported at room temperature.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.exppara.2016.06.003DOI Listing

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