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- Title
Evaluation of parasite and host genetics in two generations of a family with Chagas disease.
- Authors
Lima, Ana Paula Braga; de Oliveira, Maykon Tavares; Silva, Rafael Rodrigues; Torres, Rosália Morais; Veloso, Vanja Maria; de Lana, Marta; da Silva, Glenda Nicioli
- Abstract
Chagas disease, caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, is considered to be a multifactorial disease associated with host and parasite genetics, which influence clinical aspects of the disease and other host conditions. In order to understand better the evolution of the disease, this study intended to evaluation of parasite and host genetics in two generations of a family with Chagas disease from the Alto Paranaiba region, Minas Gerais, Brazil, comprising a mother and her five daughters. Several features were evaluated, including the characterization of T. cruzi directly from the blood of patients, host polymorphisms of genes related to cardiomyopathy (TNF, WISP1, CCR5, and TGF-β1) and clinical aspects of the patients. To verify the intraspecific variability of the parasite, the characterization was done directly from human blood using the PCR-LSSP technique and analyzed based on Dice coefficient and unweighted pair group analysis (UPGMA). The host polymorphism was evaluated by PCR-RFLP. The global results showed low variability of the parasites characterized from blood of patients, through Shannon index (0.492) and mean heterozygosity value per locus (0.322). All six patients presented the same genetic polymorphism profile for TNF, WISP1, and TGF-β1, and only one patient was homozygous to CCR5, which suggests that there is no association between the clinical aspects of the patients and their genetic profiles. In conclusion, the findings confirm that the understanding of the clinical evolution of Chagas disease goes beyond the genetic aspects of the parasite and the host.
- Subjects
CHAGAS' disease; GENOTYPES; PARASITIC diseases; PARASITES; PROTOZOA
- Publication
Parasitology Research, 2018, Vol 117, Issue 9, p3009
- ISSN
0932-0113
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00436-018-5969-5