Congenital toxoplasmosis in chronically infected and subsequently challenged ewes
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This experiment studied congenital transmission in sheep experimentally infected with
oocysts of Toxoplasma gondii and reinfected at one of three stages of pregnancy. Twenty
ewes were experimentally infected with T. gondii strain ME49 (day 0). After the T. gondii
infection became chronic (IFAT 512), the ewes were allocated with rams for coverage.
After the diagnosis of pregnancy, these ewes were allocated into four experimental groups
(n = 5): I-reinfected with T. gondii on the 40th day of gestation (DG); II-reinfected on DG 80;
III-reinfected on DG 120; and IV-saline solution on DG 120 (not reinfected). Five ewes
(IFAT<64) were kept as negative controls (uninfected, group V), therefore in groups I-III
were infected prior to pregnancy and re-infected during pregnancy, group IV was only
infected prior to pregnancy, and group V was not infected. Parasitism by T. gondii was
investigated (histopathology, immunohistochemistry, mouse bioassay and PCR) in moth ers and lambs tissue. All ewes produced lambs serologically positive for T. gondii. The
results of the mouse bioassay, immunohistochemistry and PCR assays revealed the pres ence of T. gondii in all 20 sheep and their lambs. The congenital transmission of T. gondii
was associated with fetal loss and abnormalities in persistently infected sheep and in ewes
infected and subsequently reinfected by this protozoan. Therefore, congenital T. gondii
infection was common when ewes were chronically infected prior to pregnancy, with or
without reinfection during at various stages of gestation.
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SANTOS, T. R. et al. Congenital toxoplasmosis in chronically infected and subsequently challenged ewes. Plos One, San Francisco, v. 11, n. 10, e0165124, 2016. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0165124. Disponível em: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0165124. Acesso em: 13 ago. 2025.