Abstract

Coccidiosis, caused by Eimeria species, results in huge economic losses to the animal industry. Dinitolmide, a veterinary-approved coccidiostat, has a wide anticoccidial spectrum with no effect on host immunity. However, the mechanism of its anticoccidial effects remains unclear. Here, we used an in vitro culture system of T. gondii to explore the anti-Toxoplasma effect of dinitolmide and its underlying mechanism against coccidia. We show that dinitolmide has potent in vitro anti-Toxoplasma activity with the half-maximal effective concentration (EC50) of 3.625µg/ml. Dinitolmide treatment significantly inhibited the viability, invasion and proliferation of T. gondii tachyzoites. The recovery experiment showed that dinitolmide can completely kill T. gondii tachyzoites after 24h of treatment. Morphologically abnormal parasites were observed after dinitolmide exposure, including asynchronous development of daughter cells and deficiency of parasite inner and outer membrane. Further electron microscopy results showed that the drug could damage the membrane structure of T. gondii. By comparative transcriptomic analysis, we found that genes related to cell apoptosis and nitric-oxide synthase were up-regulated after dinitolmide treatment, which might be responsible for parasite cell death. Meanwhile, many Sag-related sequence (srs) genes were down-regulated after treatment, which could be closely associated with the reduction of parasite invasion and proliferation capacity. Our study indicates that the coccidiostat dinitolmide has a potent inhibitory effect on T. gondii in vitro and provides insight into the mode of action of the drug.

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