Toxoplasmosis Class SMV 2023
Toxoplasmosis Class SMV 2023
Toxoplasmosis Class SMV 2023
What is toxoplasmosis?
• Toxoplasmosis is a parasitic disease caused by the
protozoan Toxoplasma gondii.
• The organism was first described in 1908 in Tunis by
Nicolle and Manceaux within the tissues of the gundi.
In the same year it was also described in Brazil by
Splendore within the tissues of a rabbit.
• The parasite infects most warm-blooded animals,
including humans, but the primary host are cats.
• Animals are infected by eating infected meat, by
ingestion of faeces of a cat that has itself recently
been infected, or by transmission from mother to
fetus.
• Cats have been shown as a major reservoir of this
infection.
Toxoplasmosis in the US
Latent toxoplasmosis
• In most immunocompetent patients, the infection enters a latent phase,
during which only bradyzoites are present, forming cysts in nervous and
muscle tissue.
• Most infants who are infected while in the womb have no symptoms at
birth but may develop symptoms later in life.
Taxonomic classification
• Kingdom: Protista
Phylum: Apicomplexa
Class: Conoidasida
Subclass: Coccidiasina
Order: Eucoccidiorida
Family: Sarcocystidae
Genus: Toxoplasma
Specie: gondii
The life cycle of T. gondii has two phases:
• Sexual part of the life cycle (coccidia like): only in
members of the Felidae family (domestic and wild
cats), the parasite's primary host.
Life cycle
Enteroepithelial cycle:
only in the cat
Extraintestinal cycle: in
cat and other
mammals
Life forms
• This parasite is polymorphic, and its life forms
are:
• The cysts survive passage through the stomach of the cat and the parasites
infect epithelial cells of the small intestine where they undergo sexual
reproduction and oocyst formation.
Scanning electron
micrograph of a
tachyzoite of
Toxoplasma gondii
(purple) adhered to a
lymphocyte (beige).
From: MacLaren et al.
(2004) Veterinary
Parasitology 125:301–
312
Scanning electron
micrograph of a
tachyzoite of
Toxoplasma gondii
(purple) invading a
macrophage (beige).
The cell body of the
parasite is constricted
at the point of contact
with the host cell.
Scanning electron
micrograph of a host
cell (beige) from which
the plasma membrane
was scrapped,
showing the
parasitophorous
vacuole with a rosette
of tachyzoites of
Toxoplasma gondii
(purple) linked to each
other by a filamentous
network (pink).
(a) Tachyzoite, (b) Bradyzoite, and (c) Sporozoite. The nucleus (blue) is surrounded by the rough
endoplasmic reticulum (Yelow). Above it, The Golgi complex (green) and the apicoplast (blue-green).
The single mitochondrion spreads through the cytosol (red). Dense granules (magenta) and amylopectin
granules (white) are dispersed in the cytosol. The apical complex is composed by the cilindrical conoid.
Below, the secretory organelles: micronemes (Orange) and rhoptries (pink). The cell body is limited by
three membrane units (the pellicle) and below it a set of subpelicular microtubules.
Sequence of cystogenesis. (1) invasion of a host cell. (2) formation of the parasitophorous vacuole. (3) Division os
parasites without formation of a residual body. (4) Thickening of the vacuolar membrane by deposition of
molecules secreted by the bradyzoites. (5) and (6) The cyst wall thickens and the bradyzoites continue to divide
slowly. (7) The fully formed cyst can fill most of the cytoplasm of the host cell.
Latent toxoplasmosis
• In most immunocompetent patients, the infection enters a latent phase,
during which only bradyzoites are present, forming cysts in nervous and
muscle tissue.
• Most infants who are infected while in the womb have no symptoms at
birth but may develop symptoms later in life.
Clinical presentation in adults
Latent/chronic toxoplasmosis
• Maculopapular rash;
• Hepatitis, encephalomyelitis, myocarditis;
• Retinochoroiditis (may evolve to blindness).
Bilateral macular scar in classical congenital toxoplasmosis. Courtesy: Prof. Rubens Belfort Jr.
Necrotic foci in
patient with
cerebral
toxoplasmosis
(immunocompro
mised patients)
Expansive necrosis, leading to compression of the ventricular space and deviation of the septum pellucidum.
• The parasite has the ability to change the behavior of its host: infected rats and
mice are less fearful of cats — in fact, some of the infected rats seek out cat-urine-
marked areas. This effect is advantageous to the parasite, which will be able to
sexually reproduce if its host is eaten by a cat. The mechanism for this change is
not completely understood, but there is evidence that toxoplasmosis infection
raises dopamine levels and concentrates in the amygdala in infected mice.
• The findings of behavioral alteration in rats and mice have led some scientists to
speculate that toxoplasma may have similar effects in humans, even in the latent
phase that had previously been considered asymptomatic.
• Toxoplasma is one of a number of parasites that may alter their host's behaviour as
a part of their life cycle. The behaviors observed, if caused by the parasite, are
likely due to infection and low-grade encephalitis, which is marked by the presence
of cysts in the brain.
• The possibility that toxoplasmosis is one cause of schizophrenia has been studied
by scientists since at least 1953.
• These studies had attracted little attention from U.S. researchers until they were
publicized through the work of prominent psychiatrist and advocate E. Fuller
Torrey. In 2003, Torrey published a review of this literature, reporting that almost
all the studies had found that schizophrenics have elevated rates of Toxoplasma
infection.
• A 2006 paper has even suggested that prevalence of toxoplasmosis has large-
scale effects on national culture. These types of studies are suggestive but
cannot confirm a causal relationship (hard to establish a causal relationship).
Biological modifications of the host
• Toxoplasma's role in schizophrenia
• Clinical
• Ocular disease is diagnosed based on the appearance of the lesions in the
eye, symptoms, course of disease, and often serologic testing.
• Parasites can also be isolated from blood or other body fluids (for example, CSF)
but this process can be difficult and requires considerable time.
Chromofor
Enzyme
(peroxidase or phosphatase)
Antibody
anti-human
Antibody
(patient)
Antigen
(parasite) Support
Indirect Imunoflurescence
Objetive
lens Light
Ab2 linked to
Ab1 fluorochrome
Ag
(microorg.) slide
UV
Light
A: Formalin-fixed T. gondii
B: Negative IFA for
tachyzoites, stained by
antibodies to T. C: Negative IFA for
immunofluorescence (IFA). This is antibodies to T. gondii,
a positive reaction (tachyzoites + gondii.
polar stain reaction.
human antibodies to Toxoplasma
+ FITC-labelled antihuman IgG =
fluorescence.)
Diagnosis
• Molecular
• The parasite's DNA can be detected by PCR in the amniotic fluid; it can be
useful in cases of possible mother-to-child (congenital) transmission.
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
3’ 5’
heat
DNA
polymerase
• atovaquone — an antibiotic that has been used to kill Toxoplasma cysts inside
AIDS patients.
• Wash cutting boards, dishes, counters, utensils, and hands with hot soapy water
after contact with raw meat, poultry, seafood, or unwashed fruits or vegetables.
• Freeze meat for several days before cooking to greatly reduce chance of infection
(-21°C for 28 days for oocysts, though the muscle cysts are killed by freezing at -6
°C for 1 day or immediately at –21°C).
• The U.S. Government and the meat industry continue their efforts to reduce T.
gondii in meat.
Prophylaxis
How to reduce Risk of Toxoplasmosis from the Environment
• Wear gloves when gardening and during any contact with soil or sand because it
might be contaminated with cat feces that contain Toxoplasma. Wash hands
thoroughly after gardening or contact with soil or sand.
• Feed cats only canned or dried commercial food or well-cooked table food, not
raw or undercooked meats.
• Change the litter box daily if you own a cat. The Toxoplasma parasite does not
become infectious until 1 to 5 days after it is shed in a cat's feces.
Prophylaxis
How to reduce Risk of Toxoplasmosis from the Environment
• The sporozoites are released and parasitize epithelial cells of the gastrointestinal tract or
other tissues such as the respiratory tract.
• In these cells, the parasites undergo asexual multiplication (schizogony or merogony) and
then sexual multiplication (gametogony) producing microgamonts (male) and
macrogamonts (female)
• Two different types of oocysts are produced, the thick-walled, which is commonly excreted
from the host and the thin-walled oocyst, which is primarily involved in autoinfection.
• Oocysts are infective upon excretion, thus permitting direct and immediate fecal-oral
transmission.
• Note that oocysts of Cyclospora cayetanensis, another important coccidian parasite, are
unsporulated at the time of excretion and do not become infective until sporulation is
completed.
Cryptosporidium pathogenesis
Glucose-coupled Na+
absorption is decreased and
Cl- secretion is increased.
Diarrhea is due to osmotic
disequilibrium
Many factors may be involved in the diarrhea associated with cryptosporidiosis. (Modifie
from Clark and Sears, Parasitology Today 12:221, 1996.)
Cryptosporidium pathogenesis
• The watery nature of the diarrhea associated with Cryptosporidium
infections has suggested the presence of an enterotoxin.
• While the small intestine is the site most commonly affected, symptomatic
Cryptosporidium infections have also been found in other organs including other
digestive tract organs, the lungs, and possibly conjunctiva.
Diagnosis
• Anti-parasitic drugs. These medications can help alleviate diarrhea by attacking the
metabolic processes of the cryptosporidium organisms. These drugs include nitazoxanide
(Alinia), paromomycin (Humatin) and azithromycin (Zithromax).
• Anti-motility agents. These medications slow down the movements of your intestines and
increase fluid absorption to relieve diarrhea and restore normal stools. These medications
include loperamide and its derivatives (Anti-Diarrheal Formula, Imodium).
• Fluid replacement. You'll need replacement of fluids and electrolytes — minerals such as
sodium, potassium and calcium that maintain the balance of fluids in your body — lost to
persistent diarrhea, either orally or intravenously. These precautions will help keep your
body hydrated and functioning properly.