Decreased level of novelty seeking in blood donors infected with Toxoplasma
Skallová, A., Novotná, M., Kolbeková, P., Gasová, Z., Veselý,V., Sechovská, M., Flegr, J.
Neuroendocrinology Letters 2005; 26: 480-486
Click for abstract
OBJECTIVES
:
Toxoplasma gondii
, a parasitic protozoan, infects about 30–60% of
people worldwide.
Toxoplasma
is known to induce behavioral changes and an
increase of dopamine in mice. The presence of anti-
Toxoplasma
antibodies (latent
toxoplasmosis) is also a risk factor for schizophrenia. Latent toxoplasmosis in
men (male soldiers) is associated with lower novelty seeking. As the novelty seek
-
ing is supposed to negatively correlate with level of dopamine, the observed effect
was interpreted as indirect evidence of increased dopamine levels in subjects with
toxoplasmosis. However, it is also possible that the observed effect was caused by
association of both novelty seeking and
Toxoplasma
infection with a third factor,
e.g. size of place of residence.
METHODS
:
Personality profile of 290 blood donors (205 men and 85 women) were
measured by Cloninger’s TCI (Temperament and Character Inventory) and their
blood samples were assayed for the presence of anti-
Toxoplasma
antibodies. Dif
-
ference between
Toxoplasma
-infected and
Toxoplasma
-free subjects was tested
with ANCOVA method with gender, size of place of residence, and age as covari
-
ates.
RESULTS
:
The present analysis revealed that lower novelty seeking was associ
-
ated with latent toxoplasmosis both in men and women. The effect of infection
on novelty seeking remained significant even after adjustment for size of place of
residence (p<0.0).
CONCLUSION
:
Decreased novelty seeking in
Toxoplasma
-infected subjects have
been already confirmed in three independent populations (male soldiers and
male and female blood donors). These findings suggest that the local inflamma
-
tion-induced increase in dopamine in the brain of infected subjects can represent
a missing link between toxoplasmosis and schizophrenia