AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the immune response in sheep's placenta after infection with toxoplasmosis, focusing on early abortions.
  • It was found that parasitic activity in the placenta only appeared 4 weeks after the infection, with distinct immune cell changes observed at different stages of abortion.
  • The research suggests that the immune responses from both the maternal and fetal sides of the placenta play a role in the disease's development and vary between early and late abortion cases.

Article Abstract

Early abortion in ovine toxoplasmosis has had limited investigation. This study evaluated the immune response in the placenta of sheep orally infected with and euthanized between 2 and 4 weeks postinfection. infection of the placenta was only found at 4 weeks after infection. Parasitic debris in foci of necrosis were immunolabeled in the maternal caruncle, whereas well-preserved intracellular parasitic vacuole-like structures were found in trophoblasts of fetal cotyledon. Early abortions had increased macrophages in caruncular septa, whereas in later abortions the placentas containing the parasite had an increase of T lymphocytes and macrophages mainly in the fetal cotyledons. This study suggests that the immune response in both the fetal and maternal compartments of the placenta may contribute to the pathogenesis of ovine toxoplasmosis and that these responses differ between early and late presentations of the disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0300985820923987DOI Listing

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