Abstract

Competitive interactions between Neospora caninum and Toxoplasma gondii were studied because both species appear to have identical ecological niches in vitro. Tachyzoites of N. caninum (NC-1 isolate) and T. gondii (RH isolate) were compared in three in vitro studies: (1) rate of penetration of host cells; (2) generation time; and (3) competition between the two species when grown together in the same flask and allowed to compete for space. When tachyzoites of the two species were inoculated onto human foreskin fibroblasts, 3.24-times more N. caninum tachyzoites penetrated cells by 1 h p.i. At 3 h p.i., there were 2.87-times more N. caninum intracellular tachyzoites than T. gondii tachyzoites. The generation times for N. caninum (NC-1 isolate) and T. gondii (RH isolate) were approximately 14–15 h and 8–10 h, respectively. Before exponential growth occurred, both species displayed a lag period, which was 10–12 h for N. caninum and 8–10 h for T. gondii. To observe competition, equal numbers of tachyzoites of each species were mixed and inoculated into flasks of host cells, and the monolayers were allowed to proceed to >90% lysis before the next transfer. Competition was analysed for 31 days by labelling samples of each flask with a species-specific monoclonal antibody and determining the ratio of each species. In all trials, T. gondii outcompeted N. caninum. By 4 days p.i., 70% of the tachyzoites were T. gondii; this percentage increased to 97% by 23 days p.i. When the starting inoculum contained 75% N. caninum and 25% T. gondii tachyzoites, T. gondii was still competitively superior. When infected monolayers that were labelled with T. gondii-specific antibodies were examined, it was noted that both species can occupy and undergo endodyogeny in the same host simultaneously.

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