Abstract

The relationship between the growth rate of Trypanosoma brucei gambiense and its virulence was investigated. A cloned, monomorphic, slow growing, and relatively avirulent line of T. b. gambiense was serially passaged at 3- to 5-day intervals through immunosuppressed mice. The growth rate measured within the first 2 patent days of infection did not vary significantly through the first 25 passages but by passage 50 had decreased significantly from 11.9 +/- 1.1 hr to 9.0 +/- 0.7 hr. A clone from passage 50 and three different second peak heterologous variants all had statistically similar growth rates, indicating that the rate of proliferation was a stable trait. With the faster rate of proliferation there was a corresponding increase in virulence. The inoculum necessary to kill 50% of normal outbred mice in the first peak of parasitemia (LD50) dropped significantly from 3 X 10(6) first passage parasites to 4 X 10(5) passage 50 parasites. The lethal load for both fast and slow growing organisms was the same (greater than 2 X 10(9) trypanosomes/ml of blood). To further link virulence and growth rate, a strong correlation (r = 0.89) was measured when generation times of 10 closely related lines of T. b. gambiense, and 2 lines of pleomorphic T. b. rhodesiense were compared to their LD50 values. While the rate of trypanosomal proliferation was similar between the day of inoculation through the second patent day, it slowed to 64% of that level once parasitemias exceeded 3 X 10(8) organisms/ml of host blood.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call