Background: In the past for more than 100 years at least 300 genotypes of Toxoplasma gondii were recorded and several traditional isolates such as RH, GT1, ME49, PRU and VEG were used repeatedly to clarify the pathogenic mechanisms and the epidemiological significance to human, but for if their virulence was mutative post-iterative passages it remains confused.
Objective: Therefore, in the study, seven genetically distinct T. gondii including C7 and PYS previously discovered in China were reidentified by sequencing the head of hsp40 locus to distinguish their virulence in vitro post-rejuvenation in vivo.
Results: Our data showed the nucleotides were different in 18 positions and 7 of them can be used to type T. gondii isolates. Total 634 plaques of T. gondii without two or more overlaps indicated that RH and GT1 tachyzoites possess stronger power than other five isolates in vitro (p < 0.001), followed by ME49, PRU, C7, PYS, and the weakest VEG. Based on the shapes of plaques, we found the ratio of their width/length was associated with the virulence of T. gondii, and speculated it could be used to judge T. gondii tachyzoites in vitro, whereas the data of simple linear regression analyses did not agree.
Conclusions: Together, virulence of seven genetically distinct T. gondii isolates that can be distinguished by seven mutative nucleotides in hsp40 was redefined in vitro post-rejuvenation in vivo, and it cannot be directly judged just according to the shapes of plaques formed in vitro.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11686-023-00740-8 | DOI Listing |
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