No evidence for airborne transmission of Toxoplasma gondii in a very high prevalence area in Lancaster County

Author:

Wadhawan Abhishek12,Hill Dolores E.3,Dagdag Aline1,Mohyuddin Hira1,Donnelly Patrick14,Jones Jeffrey L.1,Postolache Teodor T.156

Affiliation:

1. Mood and Anxiety Program, Department of Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore , USA

2. Saint Elizabeths Hospital, Psychiatry Residency Training Program, Washington , USA

3. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, Animal Parasitic Diseases Laboratory, Beltsville , USA

4. Amish Research Clinic, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Lancaster , USA

5. Rocky Mountain Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC), Veterans Integrated Service Network (VISN), Military and Veteran Microbiome Consortium for Research and Education (MVM-CoRE), Denver , USA

6. Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC), Veterans Integrated Service Network (VISN), VA Capitol Health Care Network, Baltimore , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background: Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) has been associated with acute food-borne illness, chronic low-grade inflammation, neuropsychiatric conditions and reactivation of chronic latent infection in immunocompetent hosts. Primary infection with T. gondii in pregnant women can lead to congenital toxoplasmosis. In addition to well-known oral tissue-cyst or oocyst ingestion, we hypothesized that the very high prevalence of T. gondii in certain populations exposed to agricultural dust could be, in part, a consequence of airborne infection with oocysts. Methods: We collected environmental dust samples from an area with a reportedly high T. gondii seroprevalence in the Old Order Amish population, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Samples included: a) air filters from air-conditioning units; b) swabs of settled dust; and c) vacuum filters containing airborne field dust. Pools of the swabs and shredded sub-samples of the air filters were fed to pigs, with inoculation into mice of heart tissue from seroconverted pigs. We also investigated the presence of T. gondii DNA using PCR amplification. Results: Only one pig seroconverted. However, bioassay of pig heart tissue further inoculated into mice showed no evidence of T. gondii infection. Consistently, no evidence of T. gondii DNA was revealed in any sample. Conclusions: No evidence of airborne transmission was found in the environmental samples that were examined.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,Molecular Medicine,Biochemistry

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