The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection.

Mammalian hosts of African trypanosomes show marked differences in susceptibility to infection with Trypanosoma congolense as judged by survival time, anaemia, and levels of parasitaemia. For instance, the N'Dama cattle and the West African shorthorn breeds are resistant to Trypanosomiasis whereas t...

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Main Author: Hassan, M.A.
Format: Tesis
Language:Inglés
Published: University of Nairobi 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79665
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author Hassan, M.A.
author_browse Hassan, M.A.
author_facet Hassan, M.A.
author_sort Hassan, M.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Mammalian hosts of African trypanosomes show marked differences in susceptibility to infection with Trypanosoma congolense as judged by survival time, anaemia, and levels of parasitaemia. For instance, the N'Dama cattle and the West African shorthorn breeds are resistant to Trypanosomiasis whereas the Zebu and European cattle breeds are in general, more susceptible. Similarly, C57BLl6J mice are relatively resistant to Trypanosoma congolense infection than BALB/c and A/J strains. Because bloodstream trypanosomes cannot synthesize lipids de novo, and that resistant animals (cattle, buffalo, and mice) have lower plasma lipid levels than the susceptible ones, it was hypothesized in this work, that plasma lipids influence progression of Trypanosomiasis. Furthermore, genetic studies have mapped the quantitative trait loci (QTL) for trypanotolerance and plasma lipid levels in mice to the same region. Finally, studies indicate that the genes that control plasma lipid levels are differentially expressed in resistant versus susceptible strains during Trypanosomiasis To investigate this hypothesis, the plasma lipid levels of C57BLl6J, A/J, and BALB/c inbred mice were manipulated by feeding them (ad libitum) on calorie matched low (5.16%) or high (23.45%) fat diets. The diets were designated low or high fat when compared to the basal (10% fat) laboratory mouse diet. Mice were then infected with T. congolense. Parasitaemia, body weight, plasma lipids and anaemia were then monitored. Results indicate that the mice on the high fat diet suffered more weight loss and had low parasitaemia than those on the low fat diet. Hence it can be concluded that, high plasma lipid levels do not aggravate Trypanosomiasis.
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spelling CGSpace796652023-02-15T11:16:57Z The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection. Hassan, M.A. animals animal diseases diet Mammalian hosts of African trypanosomes show marked differences in susceptibility to infection with Trypanosoma congolense as judged by survival time, anaemia, and levels of parasitaemia. For instance, the N'Dama cattle and the West African shorthorn breeds are resistant to Trypanosomiasis whereas the Zebu and European cattle breeds are in general, more susceptible. Similarly, C57BLl6J mice are relatively resistant to Trypanosoma congolense infection than BALB/c and A/J strains. Because bloodstream trypanosomes cannot synthesize lipids de novo, and that resistant animals (cattle, buffalo, and mice) have lower plasma lipid levels than the susceptible ones, it was hypothesized in this work, that plasma lipids influence progression of Trypanosomiasis. Furthermore, genetic studies have mapped the quantitative trait loci (QTL) for trypanotolerance and plasma lipid levels in mice to the same region. Finally, studies indicate that the genes that control plasma lipid levels are differentially expressed in resistant versus susceptible strains during Trypanosomiasis To investigate this hypothesis, the plasma lipid levels of C57BLl6J, A/J, and BALB/c inbred mice were manipulated by feeding them (ad libitum) on calorie matched low (5.16%) or high (23.45%) fat diets. The diets were designated low or high fat when compared to the basal (10% fat) laboratory mouse diet. Mice were then infected with T. congolense. Parasitaemia, body weight, plasma lipids and anaemia were then monitored. Results indicate that the mice on the high fat diet suffered more weight loss and had low parasitaemia than those on the low fat diet. Hence it can be concluded that, high plasma lipid levels do not aggravate Trypanosomiasis. 2003 2017-02-03T11:04:24Z 2017-02-03T11:04:24Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79665 en Limited Access University of Nairobi Hassan, M. A. 2003. The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection. MSc thesis in Biochemistry. University of Nairobi.
spellingShingle animals
animal diseases
diet
Hassan, M.A.
The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection.
title The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection.
title_full The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection.
title_fullStr The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection.
title_full_unstemmed The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection.
title_short The correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection.
title_sort correlation of plasma lipid levels with susceptibility of inbred laboratory mice to experimental trypanosoma congolense infection
topic animals
animal diseases
diet
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/79665
work_keys_str_mv AT hassanma thecorrelationofplasmalipidlevelswithsusceptibilityofinbredlaboratorymicetoexperimentaltrypanosomacongolenseinfection
AT hassanma correlationofplasmalipidlevelswithsusceptibilityofinbredlaboratorymicetoexperimentaltrypanosomacongolenseinfection