Evidence for genetic diversity of Toxoplasma gondii in selected intermediate hosts in Serbia

Evidence for genetic diversity of Toxoplasma gondii in selected intermediate hosts in Serbia

Accepted Manuscript Title: Evidence for genetic diversity of Toxoplasma gondii in selected intermediate hosts in Serbia ˇ Author: Marija Markovi´c Vla...

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Accepted Manuscript Title: Evidence for genetic diversity of Toxoplasma gondii in selected intermediate hosts in Serbia ˇ Author: Marija Markovi´c Vladimir Ivovi´c Tijana Stajner Vitomir Djoki´c Ivana Klun Branko Bobi´c Aleksandra Nikoli´c Olgica Djurkovi´c-Djakovi´c PII: DOI: Reference:

S0147-9571(14)00018-6 http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1016/j.cimid.2014.03.001 CIMID 961

To appear in: Received date: Revised date: Accepted date:

5-11-2013 27-2-2014 3-3-2014

ˇ Please cite this article as: Markovi´c M, Ivovi´c V, Stajner T, Djoki´c V, Klun I, Bobi´c B, Nikoli´c A, Djurkovi´c-Djakovi´c O, Evidence for genetic diversity of Toxoplasma gondii in selected intermediate hosts in Serbia, Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cimid.2014.03.001 This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.

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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

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Evidence for genetic diversity of Toxoplasma gondii in selected

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intermediate hosts in Serbia

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Marija Marković, Vladimir Ivović, Tijana Štajner, Vitomir Djokić, Ivana Klun,

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Branko Bobić, Aleksandra Nikolić, Olgica Djurković-Djaković*

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National Reference Laboratory for Toxoplasmosis, Institute for Medical Research,

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University of Belgrade, Dr. Subotića 4, P.O. Box 102, 11129 Belgrade, Serbia

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Running title: Toxoplasma genotypes in Serbia

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* Corresponding author. Tel.: +381 11 2685 788; fax: +381 11 2643 691. E-mail address: [email protected] (O. Djurković-Djaković).

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ABSTRACT

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To contribute to the insight into the worldwide population structure of Toxoplasma gondii, we

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genetically characterized a total of eight strains isolated from intermediate hosts including

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humans, sheep and pigeons in Serbia. Although parasite DNA was detected in 28.2% (60/213)

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of the human samples from 162 patients serologically suspected of active toxoplasmosis, as

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well as in 5/7 seropositive pigeons and in 2/12 seropositive sheep examined, multilocus PCR-

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RFLP genotyping, using SAG1, 5’SAG2, 3’SAG2, GRA6, 5’GRA7 and 3’GRA7 as markers,

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was successful in only four human isolates (of which one was isolated from both the

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bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and blood samples of a single patient), one sheep and three

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pigeons. Of the eight isolates, five were type II (62.5%), one was type III, one was atypical,

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and one had a type I allele at GRA6 as the single locus genotyped. Although type II, as

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elsewhere in Europe, predominated, these results may suggest a higher genetic diversity of T.

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gondii in Serbia, reflecting local environmental contamination and also the geographical

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position of the country in South-East Europe. deletion

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Key words: Toxoplasma gondii, intermediate hosts, humans, sheep, pigeons, genotyping,

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PCR-RFLP, Serbia, South-East Europe

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Introduction Toxoplasma gondii, a ubiquitous protozoan, infects a broad range of mammals and birds

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which all act as intermediate hosts, whereas felids are the only definitive hosts. In

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intermediate hosts, following a brief acute stage characterized by the presence of circulating

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tachyzoites, parasites convert to tissue cysts mainly localized in the muscular and neural

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tissues. In felids, sexual reproduction of the parasite results in the production of oocysts shed

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with feces, thereby contaminating the environment. Infection with either parasite form is

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mainly peroral, and consumption of meat containing tissue cysts and ingestion of oocysts

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from water and soil (through gardening and farming) have been shown to be major routes of

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human infection [1,2]. Toxoplasmosis in humans is generally benign, but may have serious

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consequences in the developing fetus in case of maternal infection in pregnancy and in

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immunosuppressed individuals. In animals, T. gondii infection can cause various health

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problems, ranging from mild to serious infectious disease symptoms to reproductive issues,

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and even disseminated infection and death deletion [3]. The risk to human and animal health,

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in line with the One Health concept, warrants evaluation of T. gondii distribution in the

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environment. As the detection of T. gondii oocysts in water and soil is cumbersome and not

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yet feasible on a large scale, assessing the presence of the parasite in its herbivore

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intermediate hosts is a good indicator of environmental contamination.

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The population structure of T. gondii is unexpectedly oligoclonal for a parasite whose life

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cycle involves sexual reproduction. Initially, it was characterized by three main clonal

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lineages designated as type I, II and III that were found, with the predominance of type II, in

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Europe and North America [4-6]. However, as data for South America and Africa became

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available, a higher frequency of non-clonal strains (atypical and recombinant) was revealed,

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indicating that the population structure is more diverse than previously thought [7-10].

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Moreover, specific African non-clonal genotypes, termed Africa 1, 2 and 3, have been 3

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identified [11, 12]. But the picture is currently being complicated in the Western World as

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well, since a fourth clonal lineage has been recently described in North America [13]. Strain genotype has been associated with clinical severity of human toxoplasmosis [4].

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Type II strains have been shown to be most prevalent in congenital infection and AIDS

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patients in North America and Europe [5,6,14]. Atypical strains have been associated with

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severe toxoplasmosis in immunocompetent patients [15,16], particularly in South America

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where they correlate with ocular toxoplasmosis [7], and in the setting of immunosuppression

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[17]. In animal hosts, emerging information indicates severe histopathological lesions in

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sheep abortions caused by T. gondii of an atypical genotype [18], but also the association of

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type II strains with fatal toxoplasmosis in a cat [19], arctic foxes [20] and wild hares [21].

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Information on the population structure of T. gondii is important in view of the possible

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health implications. However, data are quite scarce for South-East Europe, Serbia included,

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where the genotype of a single human isolate has been reported [22] and virtually none in

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animals. The aim of this study was thus to identify T. gondii genotypes circulating in Serbia

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by detecting the parasite in three of its intermediate hosts.

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1. Materials and Methods

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2.1. Study area

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Located in South-East Europe, Serbia (without Kosovo) extends over a territory of 77,512

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km2 and has a population of 7.5 million. Belgrade with its surroundings (Belgrade District) is

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a highly urban region, with a population of approximately 1.6 million (Fig. 1A).

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2.2. Collection of samples

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Genotyping was attempted from both human and animal biological materials.

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Human materials involved a total of 213 body fluid samples (Table 1) from 162 patients

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both clinically and serologically suspected of active toxoplasmosis, defined as infection stages

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characterized by the presence of tachyzoites in body fluids. These included adults suspected

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of acute toxoplasmosis, women suspected of infection during pregnancy and neonates

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suspected of congenital toxoplasmosis (CT), patients with ocular and cerebral toxoplasmosis

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and patients who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), who were

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referred to the National Reference Laboratory for Toxoplasmosis (NRLToxo) between 2008

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and 2012. Since NRLToxo is the single laboratory in Serbia to perform expert diagnosis,

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patients originated from all over the country.

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Animals tested were sheep (Ovis aries) and pigeons (Columba livia) and materials

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included blood samples and hearts. Sheep samples from a total of 15 ewes (mean age 14.7

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months, range 13-24 months), were collected from two abattoirs in the vicinity of Belgrade

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(in the administrative municipalities of Pećinci and Stara Pazova), which serve the local farms

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(Fig. 1B). All sheep were destined for human consumption. Pigeons were collected within the

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scope of an ongoing large ecological investigation of feral pigeons as indicators of

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environmental contamination led by the Natural History Museum in Belgrade. For this study,

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hearts and blood samples from 72 pigeons captured at 15 collection sites, mainly in downtown

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Belgrade (Fig. 1B) were made available to us.

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2.3. Serology

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Blood samples were initially examined for T. gondii specific antibodies. Human samples

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were tested for specific IgG and IgM antibodies and avidity of specific IgG antibodies using

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commercial tests on a VIDAS analyzer (bioMérieux, Marcy l’Etoile, France). Positivity

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thresholds were 8 IU/mL for IgG and 0.65 for IgM, while avidity was expressed in index

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values (low: I < 0.2; intermediate: 0.2 ≤ I < 0.3; high: I ≥ 0.3). In some cases, specific IgM 5

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antibodies were additionally tested by the immunosorbent agglutination assay (ISAgA,

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bioMérieux, index scale 0-12, positivity threshold I = 9). Commercial assays were performed

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according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Specific IgG antibodies were also tested by an

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in-house high sensitivity agglutination test (cut-off value = 1:20) [23]. A slight adaptation of

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this test (the modified agglutination test, MAT) was used for animal samples [24]. Sheep and

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pigeon sera were serially two-fold diluted starting at 1:10 and sera reactive at ≥ 1:10 were

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considered positive [25]. In bioassay experiments, the cut-off was set at 1:20.

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2.4. Study design

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In human biological materials obtained from patients serologically suspected of active

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toxoplasmosis, genotyping was attempted both directly and, in an attempt to isolate and

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propagate the parasite, following a bioassay step. In animal samples, DNA was extracted from

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the hearts of seropositive sheep and pigeons following trypsin digestion, and PCR-positive

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hearts were further bioassayed in mice.

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The study followed the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by a local

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(Institute for Medical Research) Ethics Committee.

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2.5. Trypsin digestion of animal tissue

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Whole animal hearts (sheep ! 200g, pigeon 5-6 g) were mixed in an electric blender and

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incubated at 37 °C for 1.5 h with trypsin (final concentration 0.25%) and antibiotics [peni-

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strepto (PAA Laboratories GmbH, Pasching, Austria) and amoxicillin (Hemofarm, Vršac,

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Serbia)]. The suspension was then filtered and washed with saline three times. The obtained

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pellet was resuspended in saline, to 2 mL for sheep and to 1 mL for pigeon material. Part (200

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! L) of the homogenated tissue was analyzed by PCR and the remaining tissue of the positive

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samples was bioassayed.

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2.6. Bioassay 6

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Bioassay was performed by intraperitoneal inoculation of suspected material (! 500 ! L),

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with addition of gentamycin (Galenika, Zemun, Serbia), into two Swiss-Webster female mice

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per sample, as previously described [26]. After six weeks the mice were euthanized, blood

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was tested by MAT and brains were homogenized with 1 mL of saline each for microscopic

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examination for T. gondii cysts. Cysts were enumerated at a sensitivity threshold of 10 cysts

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per brain. A bioassay was considered positive in case of positive serology, detection of brain

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cysts, or both, and DNA was extracted from the brains of all positive mice.

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2.7. DNA extraction

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DNA was extracted from 200 ! l of biological materials using the QIAmp DNA mini kit

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(Qiagen GmbH, Hilden, Germany) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Extracted

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DNA was resuspended in 150 ! l of nuclease-free water and stored at -20°C.

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2.8. Detection of T. gondii DNA by Real-Time PCR

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T. gondii DNA was detected by Real-Time PCR (RT-PCR) targeted at the 529 bp

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repetitive element (gene bank accession number AF146527), as previously described [27].

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Briefly, the PCR reaction was performed in a final volume of 20 μL mixture containing 10 μl

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Maxima™ Probe/ROX qPCR Master Mix (2X) [Fermentas (Thermo Fisher Scientific),

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Waltham, MA, USA], 0.25 mM of each primer, 0.10 mM of TaqMan probe (Invitrogen, Life

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Technologies, Carlsbad, CA, USA), 0.015 U/μL of UNG, 25 mM MgCl2 and nuclease-free

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water, plus 3 μL of extracted DNA. Amplification was performed over 40 cycles: 2 min at 50

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ºC for UNG pre-treatment, 10 min at 94 ºC initial denaturation, followed by 40 cycles of 15 s

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at 95 ºC for denaturation and 60 s at 60 ºC for annealing/extension.

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2.9. Genotype analysis of T. gondii by multilocus PCR-RFLP

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Genotyping was performed by the PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-

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RFLP) method using six markers including SAG1, 5’SAG2, 3’SAG2, GRA6, 5’GRA7 and

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3’GRA7, across four genetic loci (Table 2). For each marker the PCR reaction mixture

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consisted of 12.5 μL PCR Master Mix (2X) (Fermentas), 1 μL 10 μМ forward and reverse

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primer, 7.5 μL nuclease free water and 3 μL DNA extracted from the sample in a 25 μL

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reaction volume. For each marker the PCR program was different (Table 3). Positive controls

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consisted of T. gondii type I (RH), type II (Me49) and type III (NED) strains, while nuclease

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free water was used as a negative control. To confirm DNA amplification, PCR products were

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separated by electrophoresis in 3% agarose gel, and digested with appropriate restriction

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enzymes for different markers. The PCR mixture for digestion consisted of 12 μL of nuclease-

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free water, 2.5 μL of buffer, 0.5 μL of restriction enzyme (concentration 5 U/µL for MbO II,

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10 U/µL for all others), and 10 μL of PCR product. RFLPs were visualized by electrophoresis

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in 3% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide. Estimation of fragment size was based on

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comparison to a 50 bp DNA ladder (Fermentas).

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2. Results

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A total of 213 biological samples from 162 patients serologically suspected of active

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toxoplasmosis was tested by RT-PCR. T. gondii DNA was detected in 60 (28.2%) samples

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from 52 individuals (Table 1). Of the 132 bioassay experiments, 30 were positive for cysts

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and/or serologically.

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T. gondii-specific antibodies were found in all tested sheep. DNA was extracted from the

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hearts of 12 animals, of which two were RT-PCR positive. Due to technical reasons, only one

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was bioassayed, leading to the isolation of a T. gondii strain (Table 4).

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Seven of the 72 pigeons (9.7%, 95% CI 2.9-16.5) were seropositive for T. gondii and DNA

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was extracted from the hearts of all seropositive animals. T. gondii DNA was detected in five 8

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animals, of which four were bioassayed and all four bioassays were positive (three based on

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the detection of cysts of which one at an extremely high cyst burden of ~2000 cysts per brain;

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one only by MAT) (Table 4). Based on previous experience in our laboratory that genotyping is feasible only in samples

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which are RT-PCR positive at a cycle threshold (Ct) value of below 30, it was attempted in a

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total of 19 human samples. However, as many of those were actually PCR-positive at a Ct

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close to 30, and the harvest of brain cysts was poor in many bioassay experiments, genotypes

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of four human isolates were determined. Of these, two belonged to type II, one was non-

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clonal and one, typed only on GRA6, had a type I allele (Table 5). The non-clonal strain,

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isolated from the blood and BAL fluid of a single patient, was type II according to SAG1,

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5’SAG2, 3’SAG2 and GRA6, but had alleles of both type I and II on 5’GRA7 and 3’GRA7,

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indicating that it could be atypical, which was later confirmed by microsatellite analysis [17].

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This strain was also the single one directly typed from both the blood and BAL samples.

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Genotyping of animal isolates was attempted from strains isolated by bioassay from four

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pigeons and one sheep and was successful in three pigeons and one sheep; of the three T.

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gondii isolates from pigeons two were type II and one was type III, while the strain isolated

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from sheep belonged to the type II lineage (Table 5).

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3. Discussion

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Genotyping of T. gondii isolates in Serbia revealed evidence of the presence of several

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genetic types. Of the eight T. gondii strains isolated from three intermediate host species

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(humans, sheep and pigeons), type II was predominant (62.5%, 5/8), but one (12.5%)

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belonged to type III, one was atypical, and one, only genotyped at the GRA6 locus, had a type

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I allele. The latter finding, however, should be taken with caution; using only GRA6 which

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may distinguish among clonal lineages was at one time considered to be sufficient for 9

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European strains where only these are expected [28], typing of a single allele does not

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necessarily imply that all alleles are of the same type [29]. Isolation of these different genotypes among eight isolates in a rather small territory may

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suggest a greater genetic diversity than would be expected from other studies in Europe. In

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humans, studies in France showed a large predominance of type II isolates (>80%), with the

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occurrence of some type I and type III isolates [6,14]. Few studies of human isolates have

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been performed elsewhere in Europe. Nowakowska et al. [30] reported that among cases of

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CT in Poland, all nine genotyped isolates were type II. Two human strains isolated from CT

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cases in Serbia and recently in the neighboring Romania, both belonged to type II [22,31].

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Type II is also vastly predominant in animals in Europe, such as in chicken in Austria [32],

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in cats in Germany [33], and even in wildlife such as carnivorous mammals [34], rodents and

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foxes [35], arctic foxes [20] and hares [21]. In this study, we analyzed sheep and pigeons as

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species that may be considered markers of environmental contamination. Sheep are

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herbivores and as such get infected mainly by ingesting T. gondii oocysts by grazing on

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pastures or through contaminated water or feed. All 15 sheep analyzed in this study were

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previously exposed to T. gondii as shown by 100% seropositivity, and the single genotyped

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isolate was characterized as type II. This is in agreement with previous work on sheep. In a

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study in England where isolation of T. gondii was performed from ovine abortion tissue, all

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13 isolated strains belonged to type II [36]. In France, analysis of eight and 46 strains isolated

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from ovine meat destined for human consumption, showed that all were type II except a

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single one which belonged to type III [37,38].

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Pigeons are free range animals that also get infected feeding from the ground. Pigeons live

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in close association with humans and their daily migrations are relatively limited. It has been

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shown that, in search for food, they rarely cross distances over 0.5-0.6 km [39], reflecting

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environmental contamination of the particular area where they are captured. And as prey to 10

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cats, pigeons may also contribute to environmental dissemination of T. gondii. Few studies

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have analyzed T. gondii genotypes of isolates from birds in general; of the 12 genotyped

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pigeon isolates in Portugal, Waap et al. [40] showed that nine were type II, but two type III

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and one type I were isolated as well. We here report that among the three genotyped pigeon

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isolates in Serbia, two were type II while one was type III. On the other hand, predominance

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of type III over type II isolates was shown in several bird species in Egypt and Iran [41,42].

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The described vast predominance of type II among both human and animal isolates

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elsewhere in Europe does not seem to apply to the Mediterranean, where type III in particular

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was much more frequent, detected in as many as 80% of the human and rodent isolates in the

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islands of Cyprus and Crete [43]; and in 33%, 26% and 16%, respectively, of the strains

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isolated from chickens, pigs and pigeons in Portugal [44,45,40]. In Spain, out of 25 human

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isolates, type I, II and III have been detected at a ratio of 40, 40, and 20%, respectively [46].

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Since these studies (with the exception of Waap et al. [40] who used five microsatellite

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markers) were based on the detection of a single marker, i.e. GRA6 or SAG2, which although

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capable of differentiating among the three clonal types, can be insufficient to detect and

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resolve atypical alleles from type III and to a lesser extent, from type I [28,47,48], it is

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possible that there may have been atypical strains among those reported as type III; if so, the

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Mediterranean area may be characterized by a larger genetic diversity compared to

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continental Europe.

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Since Serbia borders with the Mediterranean area, it may not be surprising that, as

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presented here, intermediate hosts harbored genetically diverse strains. Use of additional

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genetic markers to the six ones we used may possibly identify other alleles, characterizing

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non-clonal strains, thereby even increasing the observed diversity. The presented T. gondii

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genetic diversity may be all the more important since it has been observed in a relatively

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small geographical area. The findings plausibly reflect the geographical position of Serbia in 11

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South-East Europe, in the centre of the Balkan Peninsula, an intersection between Europe and

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Asia, and in relative proximity to Africa. Similarly, the recent finding of the Africa 1

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genotype in two human isolates from Turkey was associated with the geographical position of

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Turkey between Asia, Europe and Africa [49]. A higher genetic diversity including the

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presence of non-clonal T. gondii in Serbia may indicate phylogenetic ties among Asian,

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African and European T. gondii populations, or, in evolutionary terms more recent

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environmental contamination which may occur from migratory birds that often stopover in

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South-East Europe during their seasonal movement from Africa to the North. A relatively

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novel factor that may contribute to T. gondii genetic diversity involves globalization of food

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including importation of meats from areas of a highly divergent population structure.

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Irrespective of the origin, the public health and veterinary implications of the genetic diversity

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of T. gondii warrant more research in this and other areas of the world to fully appreciate the

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organism’s population structure and its ramifications.

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Conflict of interests

The authors declare no conflict of interests.

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Acknowledgements

The results of this paper have been presented in part at the 11th European Multicolloquium of Parasitology (EMOP XI), Cluj-Napoca, Romania, 25-29 July, 2012. deletion

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The authors are grateful to Isabelle Villena (Reims, France) for kindly supplying the

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antigen for HSDA, and the reference DNA for type III (NED strain). We also wish to

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acknowledge Marko Raković, Natural History Museum of Belgrade, for kindly letting us the

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pigeon samples.

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This study was supported by a grant (project No. III 41019) from the Ministry of

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Education, Science and Technological Development of Serbia.

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LEGEND FOR FIGURE

449 450

FIG. 1. A: Map of Europe with Serbia shaded grey. B: Map of Serbia (Belgrade District in

452

black),

sheep collection site,

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pigeon collection site; source: www.wikimedia.org.

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453

Peripheral blood Fetal blood Amniotic fluid Aqueous humor Cerebrospinal fluid BAL ∑

No. examined 138 14 38 12 10 1 213

% positive 24.6 21.4 28.9 50.0 50.0 100.0 28.2

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BAL – bronchoalveolar lavage fluid

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456 457 458

RT-PCR No. positive 34 3 11 6 5 1 60

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Sample type

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Table 1 Toxoplasma gondii DNA detection in human biological materials.

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454 455

21

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458

Table 2

459

Genetic markers, primer sequences and restriction enzymes used for PCR-RFLP analysis.

460

3’SAG2 (VIII) GRA6 (X) 5’GRA7 (VIIа)

5’-ТCCTGTCAAGTTGTCTGCGG 5’-ATCCCCCTGTGCATCCAATA 5’-GAAATGTTTCAGGTTGCTGC 5’-GCAAGAGCGAACTTGAACAC 5’-ATTCTCATGCCTCCGCTTC 5’-AACGTTTCACGAAGGCACAC 5’-TTТCCGAGCAGGTGACCT 5’-TCGCCGAAGAGTTGACATAG 5’-ACCCTATATTGGGGCTTGCT 5’-TCGGTCTGAGACTGTCAACG 5’-TTCCGACGCTGAAGTGACTG 5’-ACACTGTCCTCGAGCTCCTA

461 Source 462

Dde I

[50]

Mbo I

[5,50]

Hha I Tru1 I

Eco R I Mbo II

[48]

[50]

Bse G I

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3’GRA7 (VIIа)

08(f) 010(r) А1 А2 B2 B1 GRA6(f) GRA6(r) GRA3 GRA4 GRA7 GRA2B

Restriction enzymes

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5’SAG2 (VIII)

Primer sequence

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SAG1 (VIII)

Primer

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Genetic marker (chr. location)

22

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462 463

Table 3 PCR program for each marker. 464

PCR program

SAG1 3 min 94°C 20 sec 94°C 40X 30 sec 56°C 30 sec 72°C 5 min 72°C

5’+3’ SAG2 5 min 94°C 20 sec 94°C 40X 30 sec 60°C 1 min 72°C 5 min 72°C

GRA6 5 min 95°C 45 sec 94°C 35X 1 min 56°C 1 min 72°C 10 min 72°C

5’+3’ GRA7 465 5 min 95°C 20 sec 94°C 466 40X 20 sec 60°C 30 sec 72°C 467 5 min 72°C

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Marker

23

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Table 4 Isolation of T. gondii from animals. Method

Pigeons

Sheep

No. positive / No. analyzed

MAT

7/72

15/15

Real-Time PCR

5/7

2/12

Bioassay

4/4

1/1

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469 470 471

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472 473

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474

24

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Amniotic fluid Blood Blood/ BALa

5’SAG2

3’SAG2

us

Clinical Entity SAG1

GRA6

5’GRA7

3’GRA7

I

I or II

I or III

I

I

Genotype

Reference

I

I or II

I or III

Reference

II or III

I or II

II

II

I or II

II

II or III

II

Reference

II or III

III

I or III

III

III

I or III

II or III

III

M an

Blood

Marker

Human (B)

Infection in pregnancy

II or III

I or II

II

II

I or II

II

II or III

II

Human (B)

CT (fetus)

II or III

I or II

II

II

I or II

II

II or III

II

Human (B)

CT (neonate) Reactivation after HSCT

NA

NA

NA

I

NA

NA

NA

Ib

II or III

I or II

II

II

I or II

I or III

II or III

Atypical

Human (D) Sheep (B)

Heart

Pigeon (B)

Heart

Pigeon (B)

Heart

Pigeon (B)

II or III

I or II

II

II

I or II

II

II or III

II

II or III

I or II

II

II

NA

II

II or III

II

II or III

III

I or III

III

III

I or III

II or III

III

II or III

I or II

II

II

I or II

II

II or III

II

Ac

Heart

ed

RH Type I Me49 Type II NED Type III

Origin (typing method)

ce pt

Sample type

cr

Table 5 PCR-RFLP genotyping of human and animal Toxoplasma gondii isolates from Serbia.

NA – not amplified BAL – bronchoalveolar lavage fluid a samples from the same patient b based on a single allele identified at the GRA6 locus B – genotyping performed after bioassay D – genotyping performed directly from the material

Page 25 of 26

Figure 1.

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100 km

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