Search results for "chagas"

showing 10 items of 47 documents

Mapping of Chagas disease research: analysis of publications in the period between 1940 and 2009

2011

INTRODUCTION: Publications are often used as a measure of success in research work. Chagas disease occurs in Central and Southern America. However, during the past years, the disease has been occurring outside Latin America due to migration from endemic zones. This article describes a bibliometric review of the literature on Chagas disease research indexed in PubMed during a 70-year period. METHODS: Medline was used via the PubMed online service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine from 1940 to 2009. The search strategy was: Chagas disease [MeSH] OR Trypanosoma cruzi [MeSH]. RESULTS: A total of 13,989 references were retrieved. The number of publications increased steadily over time fro…

Microbiology (medical)Chagas diseaseChagas diseaselcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicinelcsh:RC955-962Trypanosoma cruziBibliometryBiologyMapeamentoDoença de ChagasBibliometriaparasitic diseasesmedicineHumansChagas DiseaseProdução científicaResearchScientific productionmedicine.diseaseInfectious DiseasesMappingBibliometricsTripanossomíase AmericanaParasitologyAmericasPeriodicals as TopicHumanitiesScientific productionAmerican trypanosomiasisRevista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical
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Nuclear rDNA-based molecular clock of the evolution of Triatominae (Hemiptera : Reduviidae), vectors of Chagas disease

2000

The evolutionary history and times of divergence of triatomine bug lineages are estimated from molecular clocks inferred from nucleotide sequences of the small subunit SSU (18S) and the second internal transcribed spacer (ITS-2) of the nuclear ribosomal DNA of these reduviids. The 18S rDNA molecular clock rate in Triatominae, and Prosorrhynchan Hemiptera in general, appears to be of 1.8% per 100 million years (my). The ITS-2 molecular clock rate in Triatominae is estimated to be around 0.4-1% per 1 my, indicating that ITS-2 evolves 23-55 times faster than 18S rDNA. Inferred chronological data about the evolution of Triatominae fit well with current hypotheses on their evolutionary histories…

Microbiology (medical)Chagas diseaseChagas diseaselcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicinelcsh:RC955-962lcsh:QR1-502ZoologyTAXONOMIEDNA RibosomalPolymerase Chain Reactionnuclear rDNAlcsh:Microbiology18S geneEvolution MolecularBiological ClocksevolutionRNA Ribosomal 18SmedicineETUDE COMPARATIVEAnimalsINSECTE NUISIBLECell LineagePHYLOGENIEInternal transcribed spacerMolecular clockRibosomal DNATriatominaeHEURE MOLECULAIRETriatominae vectorsGENE 18SBase SequencebiologyVECTEURITS2 SPACER.INTERNAL TRANSCRIBED SPACERmolecular clockSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseHemipteraEVOLUTIONInsect VectorsReduviidaeMALADIE DE CHAGASTaxonomy (biology)TriatominaeITS-2 spacerANALYSE GENETIQUE
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Genomic Changes of Chagas Disease Vector, South America

2004

We analyzed the main karyologic changes that have occurred during the dispersion of Triatoma infestans, the main vector of Chagas disease. We identified two allopatric groups, named Andean and non-Andean. The Andean specimens present C-heterochromatic blocks in most of their 22 chromosomes, whereas non-Andean specimens have only 4-7 autosomes with C-banding. These heterochromatin differences are the likely cause of a striking DNA content variation (approximately 30%) between Andean and non-Andean insects. Our study, together with previous historical and genetic data, suggests that T. infestans was originally a sylvatic species, with large quantities of DNA and heterochromatin, inhabiting th…

Microbiology (medical)Chagas diseaseMaleChagas diseaseEpidemiologyHeterochromatinAllopatric speciationlcsh:MedicineDisease Vectorslcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesgeographic polymorphismchemistry.chemical_compoundTriatoma infestansmedicineAnimalslcsh:RC109-216TriatomaTriatoma infestansGeneticsholocentric chromosomesAutosomebiologyResearchflow cytometrylcsh:RfungiheterochromatinSouth Americabiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseInfectious DiseaseschemistryEvolutionary biologyTriatomaVector (epidemiology)genome sizeFemaleTriatominaeDNA
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Genetic structure of Triatoma venosa (Hemiptera: Reduviidae): molecular and morphometric evidence.

2006

Triatoma venosa presents a restricted geographical distribution in America and is considered as a secondary vector of Chagas disease in Colombia and Ecuador. A total of 120 adult insects were collected in domestic and peridomestic habitats in an endemic area of the department of Boyaca, Colombia, in order to determine their genetic structure through morphometric and molecular techniques. The head and wings of each specimen were used for the analyses of size, shape, and sexual dimorphism. A significant sexual dimorphism was found, although no differences in size among the studied groups were detected. Differences were found in the analyzed structures except for male heads. DNA was extracted …

Microbiology (medical)Chagas diseaseMalelcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicinelcsh:RC955-962Triatoma venosalcsh:QR1-502Zoologyvector controllcsh:Microbiologyrandom amplified polymorphic DNADNA Ribosomal SpacermedicineAnimalsTriatomageometric morphometryinternal transcriber space-2Sex Characteristicsbiologybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseHemipteraRAPDInsect VectorsRandom Amplified Polymorphic DNA TechniqueSexual dimorphismGenetics PopulationReduviidaeVector (epidemiology)Genetic structureFemaleTriatoma venosaMemorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
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Does Autoimmunity Play a Role in the Immunopathogenesis of Vasculitis Associated With Chronic Chagas Disease?

2021

Chagas disease (CD) is a chronic systemic vector-borne infection caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi. It has spread from Latin America through migration, becoming a global issue (Perez-Molina and Molina, 2018). Its prevalence is ∼7 million people worldwide, of whom 30-40% will develop severe chronic complications such as cardiomyopathy or megaviscerae, with a considerable impact on morbimortality (WHO, 2020; WHO, 2021). The parasite is transmitted after metacyclic trypomastigotes in the feces of a triatomine insect enter the host through the bite wound. They penetrate cells and transform into amastigotes, where they multiply by binary fission and differentiate again into circulating t…

Microbiology (medical)Chagas diseaseVasculitisOpinionTrypanosoma cruziImmunologyInflammationmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyAutoimmunityImmune systemCellular and Infection MicrobiologyImmunopathologymedicineHumansimmunopathologyChagas DiseaseVector (molecular biology)Trypanosoma cruzibiologybusiness.industryautoimmunitymedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationQR1-502Infectious DiseasesChagasImmunologyChronic Diseasemedicine.symptombusinessVasculitisFrontiers in cellular and infection microbiology
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A nuclear ribosomal DNA pseudogene in triatomines opens a new research field of fundamental and applied implications in Chagas disease

2015

A pseudogene, designated as "ps(5.8S+ITS-2)", paralogous to the 5.8S gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS)-2 of the nuclear ribosomal DNA (rDNA), has been recently found in many triatomine species distributed throughout North America, Central America and northern South America. Among characteristics used as criteria for pseudogene verification, secondary structures and free energy are highlighted, showing a lower fit between minimum free energy, partition function and centroid structures, although in given cases the fit only appeared to be slightly lower. The unique characteristics of "ps(5.8S+ITS-2)" as a processed or retrotransposed pseudogenic unit of the ghost type are reviewed, wi…

Microbiology (medical)Chagas diseaselcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicinelcsh:RC955-962Pseudogenelcsh:QR1-502Sequence alignmentGenes InsectBiologylcsh:MicrobiologyPhylogeneticsDNA Ribosomal SpacerAnimalsInternal transcribed spacerRibosomal DNAGeneTriatominaefunctionalityPhylogenyGeneticssecondary structuresPhylogenetic treerDNA pseudogeneArticlesSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationfree energyInsect VectorsRNA Ribosomal 5.8StriatominesTriatominaeSequence AlignmentPseudogenesMemórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
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Systematics of Mepraia (Hemiptera-Reduviidae): cytogenetic and molecular variation.

2009

The haematophagous insects of the subfamily Triatominae (Hemiptera-Reduviidae) have great epidemiological importance as vectors of Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease. Mepraia was originally described as a monotypic genus comprised of Mepraia spinolai, distributed along coastal areas of northern Chile (from Region I to the Metropolitan Region). Recently, some M. spinolai populations have been ranked as a new species named Mepraia gajardoi. Several populations along the distribution range of the genus were sampled, and genetic differentiation was studied based upon the analysis of three molecular markers: cytogenetics (karyotype and chromosome behaviour during meiosis us…

Microbiology (medical)SystematicsMaleMitochondrial DNAMolecular Sequence DataMicrobiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionMepraiaCytogeneticsIntergenic regionGeneticsAnimalsChagas DiseaseChileGonadsMolecular BiologyRibosomal DNAEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyGeneticsPolymorphism GeneticbiologyMolecular epidemiologyBase SequenceGeographyChromosomebiology.organism_classificationInsect VectorsInfectious DiseasesReduviidaeEvolutionary biologyDNA IntergenicFemaleTriatominaeSequence AlignmentInfection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
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Nuclear rDNA pseudogenes in Chagas disease vectors: Evolutionary implications of a new 5.8S+ITS-2 paralogous sequence marker in triatomines of North,…

2013

A pseudogene, paralogous to rDNA 5.8S and ITS-2, is described in Meccus dimidiata dimidiata, M. d. capitata, M. d. maculippenis, M. d. hegneri, M. sp. aff. dimidiata, M. p. phyllosoma, M. p. longipennis, M. p. pallidipennis, M. p. picturata, M. p. mazzottii, Triatoma mexicana, Triatoma nitida and Triatoma sanguisuga, covering North America, Central America and northern South America. Such a nuclear rDNA pseudogene is very rare. In the 5.8S gene, criteria for pseudogene identification included length variability, lower GC content, mutations regarding the functional uniform sequence, and relatively high base substitutions in evolutionary conserved sites. At ITS-2 level, criteria were the shor…

Microbiology (medical)Triatoma sanguisugaPseudogeneMolecular Sequence DataGenes InsectDNA RibosomalMicrobiologyEvolution MolecularGeneticsAnimalsChagas DiseaseMolecular clockIndelMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCell NucleusGeneticsConcerted evolutionBase SequencePhylogenetic treebiologybiology.organism_classificationInsect VectorsPhylogeographyInfectious DiseasesTaxonAmericasTriatominaePseudogenesGC-contentInfection, Genetics and Evolution
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Synthesis, biological evaluation and chemometric analysis of indazole derivatives. 1,2-Disubstituted 5-nitroindazolinones, new prototypes of antichag…

2012

Chagas disease chemotherapy, currently based on only two drugs, nifurtimox and benznidazole, is far from satisfactory and therefore the development of new antichagasic compounds remains an important goal. On the basis of antichagasic properties previously described for some 1,2-disubstituted 5-nitroindazolin-3- ones (21, 33) and in order to initiate the optimization of activity of this kind of compounds, we have prepared a series of related analogs (22-32, 34-38, 58 and 59) and tested in vitro these products against epimastigote forms of Trypanosoma cruzi. 2-Benzyl-1-propyl (22), 2-benzyl-1-isopropyl (23) and 2-benzyl-1-butyl (24) derivatives have shown high trypanocidal activity and low un…

Models MolecularDrugChagas diseaseIndazolesStereochemistryTrypanosoma cruzimedia_common.quotation_subjectStructure-Activity Relationshipchemistry.chemical_compoundParasitic Sensitivity TestsDrug DiscoverymedicineNifurtimoxTrypanosoma cruziBiological evaluationmedia_commonPharmacologyIndazoleDose-Response Relationship DrugMolecular StructurebiologyOrganic ChemistryGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationTrypanocidal AgentsCombinatorial chemistrychemistryBenznidazolemedicine.drugEuropean Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
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Genetic variability and geographical diversity of the main Chagas' disease vector Panstrongylus megistus (Hemiptera: Triatominae) in Brazil based on …

2014

Studies were made on the ribosomal DNA intergenic region, comprising complete internal transcribed spacer (ITS)-1, 5.8S, and ITS-2 sequences, of populations of the triatomine Panstrongylus megistus, the most important vector of Chagas' disease in Brazil since Triatoma infestans eradication. Specimens were from 26 localities of Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, Paraná, São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Bahia, and Sergipe states. In total, 21 ITS-1 and 12 ITS-2 haplotypes were found. Nucleotide differences were higher in ITS-1 (3.00%) than in ITS-2 (1.33%). The intergenic region was 1,513-1,522-bp-long (mean 1,516.9 bp), providing 26 combined haplotypes. The combination of microsatellites found in bo…

Molecular Sequence DataZoologyPolymerase Chain ReactionIntergenic regionTriatoma infestansDNA Ribosomal SpacerAnimalsChagas DiseaseInternal transcribed spacerRibosomal DNATriatominaeGeneticsGenetic diversityGeneral VeterinarybiologyGenetic VariationSequence Analysis DNAPanstrongylusbiology.organism_classificationInsect VectorsRNA Ribosomal 5.8SPhylogeographyInfectious DiseasesInsect ScienceVector (epidemiology)MicrosatelliteParasitologyBrazilJournal of medical entomology
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