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Toxoplasma gondii & Human Phenotype

Compendium of Known Effects and Ongoing Research

rattus-norvegicus

Toxoplasma gondii infection and behaviour – location, location, location?

March 26, 2013
McConkey, G. A., Martin, H. L., Bristow, G. C., Webster, J. P.
Journal of Experimental Biology 2013; 216: 113-119
Click for abstract
Parasite location has been proposed as an important factor in the behavioural changes observed in rodents infected with the protozoan Toxoplasma gondii. During the chronic stages of infection, encysted parasites are found in the brain but it remains unclear whether the parasite has tropism for specific brain regions. Parasite tissue cysts are found in all brain areas with some, but not all, prior studies reporting higher numbers located in the amygdala and frontal cortex. A stochastic process of parasite location does not, however, seem to explain the distinct and often subtle changes observed in rodent behaviour. One factor that could contribute to the specific changes is increased dopamine production by T. gondii. Recently, it was found that cells encysted with parasites in the brains of experimentally infected rodents have high levels of dopamine and that the parasite encodes a tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of this neurotransmitter. A mechanism is proposed that could explain the behaviour changes due to parasite regulation of dopamine. This could have important implications for T. gondii infections in humans

Tagged: brain, Dopamine, dopamine hypothesis, host behavior, manipulation., mice, mood disorders, neurotransmitter, obsessive-compulsive disorder, Parasite, parkinsonian symptoms, psychiatric patients, rattus-norvegicus, Schizophrenia, wild brown-rats

BehaviorMental health

Toxoplasma gondii infection, from predation to schizophrenia: can animal behaviour help us understand human behaviour?

January 4, 2013
Webster, J. P., Kaushik, M., Bristow, G. C., McConkey, G. A.
Journal of Experimental Biology 2013; 216: 99-112
Click for abstract
We examine the role of the protozoan Toxoplasma gondii as a manipulatory parasite and question what role study of infections in its natural intermediate rodent hosts and other secondary hosts, including humans, may elucidate in terms of the epidemiology, evolution and clinical applications of infection. In particular, we focus on the potential association between T. gondii and schizophrenia. We introduce the novel term 'T. gondii-rat manipulation-schizophrenia model' and propose how future behavioural research on this model should be performed from a biological, clinical and ethically appropriate perspective.

Tagged: 3rs, altered behavior, behaviour, by-product, card sorting test, dopamine hypothesis, elevated plus-maze, intermediate host, male norway rats, manipulation., mouse, nmda receptor hypofunction, obsessive-compulsive disorder, pathology, rat, rattus-norvegicus, recognition memory, schistosoma-mansoni, Schizophrenia, secondary host, Toxoplasma gondii

BehaviorMental healthReviews

May Toxoplasma gondii increase suicide attempt – preliminary results in Turkish subjects?

October 19, 2010
Yagmur, F., Yazar, S., Temel, H. O., Cavusoglu, M.
Forensic Science International 2010; 199: 15-17
Click for abstract
Suicide attempts are one of the risk factors of suicide. Possible mechanisms by which Toxoplasma gondii may affect human behavior and it may also cause humans to attempt suicide. The aim of this study is to find out whether or not T. gondii is one of the reasons in suicide attempts. We investigated the seropositivity level for anti-Toxoplasma IgG and IgM antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in subjects who have attempted to suicide to find out whether there is a probable relationship between T. gondii and suicide attempts. In our study, we selected 200 cases of suicide attempts and 200 healthy volunteers. The sero-positivity level for anti-Toxoplasma IgG antibodies among suicide attempts (41%) was significantly higher than the control group (28%). This signifies that there might be a causal relationship between toxoplasmosis and the etiology of suicide attempt. (c) 2010 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Tagged: acquired toxoplasmosis, cryptogenic epilepsy, elisa, encephalits, host, human-behavior, impact, neurons, parasites, rats, rattus-norvegicus, suicide attempt, Toxoplasma gondii

BehaviorMental health

Neuropsychiatric disease and Toxoplasma gondii infection

October 26, 2009
Henriquez, S. A., Brett, R., Alexander, J., Pratt, J., Roberts, C. W.
Neuroimmunomodulation 2009; 16: 122-133.
Click for abstract
Toxoplasma gondii infects approximately 30% of the world's population, but causes overt clinical symptoms in only a small proportion of people. In recent years, the ability of the parasite to manipulate the behaviour of infected mice and rats and alter personality attributes of humans has been reported. Furthermore, a number of studies have now suggested T. gondii infection as a risk factor for the development of schizophrenia and depression in humans. As T. gondii forms cysts that are located in various anatomical sites including the brain during a chronic infection, it is well placed anatomically to mediate these effects directly. The T. gondii genome is known to contain 2 aromatic amino acid hydroxylases that potentially could directly affect dopamine and/or serotonin biosynthesis. However, stimulation of the immune response has also recently been associated with mood and behavioural alterations in humans, and compounds designed to alter mood, such as fluoxetine, have been demonstrated to alter aspects of immune function. Herein, the evidence for T.-gondii-induced behavioural changes relevant to schizophrenia and depression is reviewed. Potential mechanisms responsible for these changes in behaviour including the role of tryptophan metabolism and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis are discussed. Copyright (C) 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel

Tagged: anterior cingulate cortex, cd4(+) t-cells, central-nervous-system, cytokine messenger-rna, hippocampal volume, ifn-gamma, immune-response, major depressive disorder, pituitary-adrenal axis, rattus-norvegicus

Mental health

Epidemiological evidences from China assume that psychiatric-related diseases may be associated with Toxoplasma gondii infection

January 4, 2007
Zhu, S., Guo, M. F., Feng, Q. C., Fan, J. M.,
Neuroendocrinology Letters, 2007, 28: 115-120
Click for abstract
In recent years, the effect of Toxoplasma gondii infection on psychiatric-related aspects has been increasingly recognized. T gondii has a high affinity for brain tissue where tachyzoites may form tissue cysts and persist life long. In recent years, 15 serological surveys about T gondii infection and psychiatric diseases have been carried out in different areas in China. Studies showed that the prevalence of antibodies against T gondii in psychotic patients was much higher than in normal persons; statistically differences were significant. Studies also reported that raising cats or enjoying the habit of eating raw or under cooked meet were potential risk factors for the infection of T gondii. The epidemiological and serological evidence support the hypothesis that some psychiatric diseases such as schizophrenia or mental retardation might be linked to T gondii infection.

Tagged: 1st-episode schizophrenia, antibodies, behavior, cats, host, novelty seeking, parasites, personality changes, psychiatric-related disease, rattus-norvegicus, toxoplasmosis

Mental health

Seroepidemiology of Toxoplasma gondii infection in psychiatric in-patients in a northern Mexican city

October 30, 2006
Alvarado-Esquivel, C., Alanis-Quinones, O. P., Arreola-Valenzuela, M. A., Rodriguez-Briones, A., Piedra-Nevarez, L. J., Duran-Morales, E., Estrada-Martinez, S., Martinez-Garcia, S. A., Liesenfeld, O.
BMC Infectious Diseases 2006; 6: 178
Click for abstract
Background: Patients with psychiatric disorders were found to show a high seroprevalence of Toxoplasma gondii infection. There is scarce information about the epidemiology of T. gondii infection in psychiatric patients in Mexico. Therefore, we sought to determine the prevalence of T. gondii infection and associated socio-demographic, clinical and behavioural characteristics in a population of psychiatric patients in Durango City, Mexico. Seroprevalence in patients was compared with that obtained in a control population. Methods: One hundred and thirty seven inpatients of a public psychiatric hospital and 180 controls were examined for the presence of IgG and IgM antibodies against T. gondii by enzyme-linked immunoassay (Diagnostic Automation Inc., Calabasas, CA, USA). The control population consisted of blood donors of a public blood bank and elderly persons attending a senior center in the same city. Age in controls (42 years +/- 20.2) was comparable with that of the psychiatric patients (43.7 years +/- 13.8) (p = 0.42). Socio-demographic, clinical and behavioral characteristics from the patients were also obtained. Results: Anti-T. gondii IgG antibodies indicating latent infection with T. gondii was found in 25 (18.2%) of 137 psychiatric inpatients and 16 (8.9%) of 180 controls (p = 0.02). Ten (26.3%) of 38 schizophrenic patients had latent infection and this prevalence was also significantly higher than that observed in controls (p = 0.005). Prevalence of anti-T. gondii IgM antibodies was comparable among patients and controls (4.4% vs 2.2%, respectively, p = 0.22). Multivariate analysis showed that T. gondii infection in inpatients was positively associated with sexual promiscuity (adjusted OR = 15.8; 95% CI: 3.8-64.8), unwashed raw fruit consumption (adjusted OR = 5.19; 95% CI: 2.3-11.3), and a history of surgery (adjusted OR = 6.5; 95% CI: 2.6-16), and negatively associated with lamb meat consumption (adjusted OR = 0.26; 95% CI: 0.10-0.63). Conclusion: In the present study, psychiatric inpatients in Durango, Mexico, in general and schizophrenia inpatients in particular had a significantly higher prevalence of T. gondii infection than the control group. Results suggest that unwashed raw fruit consumption might be the most important route of T. gondii transmission in our psychiatric inpatients while lamb meat consumption the less important. Additional studies will have to elucidate the causative relation between infection with T. gondii and psychiatric disorders.

Tagged: behavior, brazil, pregnant women, rattus-norvegicus, risk factors, Schizophrenia

Mental health

Prevalence of Toxoplasma infection in first-episode schizophrenia and comparison between Toxoplasma-seropositive and Toxoplasma-seronegative schizophrenia

October 30, 2006
Wang, H. L., Wang, G. H., Li, Q. Y., Shu, C., Jiang, M. S., Guo, Y.
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 2006; 114: 40-48.
Click for abstract
Objective: To compare the prevalence of Toxoplasma infection between the first-episode schizophrenia and the controls and to compare the clinical features between the Toxoplasma-seronegative and Toxoplasma-seropositive patients with schizophrenia. Method: The rate of serum reactivity toToxoplasma in 600 schizophrenia, 600 affective disorders, and 400 controls was investigated. The clinical symptoms of the schizophrenia patients were scored and compared. Results: The rate of IgG antibody, not IgM in the schizophrenia patients, was higher than the control groups, and the odds ratio of schizophrenia associated with IgG antibody was 2.22-5.12. The affective disorders did not differ in the rate of IgG or IgM antibody from the normal or the physical disease control. The seropositive schizophrenia patients had higher scores on the positive subscale and three components of Positive and Negative Symptoms Scale than the seronegative patients. Conclusion: This study lent further weight to the hypothesis that exposure to Toxoplasma may be a risk factor for schizophrenia.

Tagged: behavior, episode schizophrenia, gondii infection, individuals, mice, personality, prevalence, rats, rattus-norvegicus, replication, Schizophrenia, signs and symptoms, toxoplasmosis

Mental health

Parasites as causative agents of human affective disorders? The impact of anti-psychotic, mood-stabilizer and anti-parasite medication on Toxoplasma gondii ‘s ability to alter host behaviour

October 30, 2006
Webster, J.P., Lamberton, P.H.L., Donnelly, C.A., Torrey, E.F.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences 2006; 273: 1023-1030
Click for abstract
With increasing pressure to understand transmissible agents, renewed recognition of infectious causation of both acute and chronic diseases is occurring. Epidemiological and neuropathological studies indicate that some cases of schizophrenia may be associated with environmental factors, such as exposure to the ubiquitous protozoan Toxoplasma gondii. Reasons for this include T gondii's ability to establish persistent infection within the central nervous system, its ability to manipulate intermediate host behaviour, the occurrence of neurological and psychiatric symptoms in some infected individuals, and an association between infection with increased incidence of schizophrenia. Moreover, several of the medications used to treat schizophrenia and other psychiatric disease have recently been demonstrated in vitro to possess antiparasitic, and in particular anti-T gondii, properties. Our aim here was thus to test the hypothesis that the anti-psychotic and mood stabilizing activity of some medications may be achieved, or at least augmented, through their in vivo inhibition of T gondii replication and invasion in infected individuals. In particular we predicted, using the epidemiologically and clinically applicable rat-T gondii model system, and following a previously described and neurologically characterized 'feline attraction' protocol that haloperidol (an antipsychotic used in the treatment of mental illnesses including schizophrenia) and/or valproic acid (a mood stabilizer used in the treatment of mental illnesses including schizophrenia), would be, at least, as effective in preventing the development of T gondii-associated behavioural and cognitive alterations as the standard anti-T gondii chemotherapeutics pyrimethamine with Dapsone. We demonstrate that, while T gondii appears to alter the rats' perception of predation risk turning their innate aversion into a 'suicidal' feline attraction, anti-psychotic drugs prove as efficient as anti-T gondii drugs in preventing such behavioural alterations. Our results have important implications regarding the aetiology and treatment of such disorders.

Tagged: acquired toxoplasmosis, antibodies, brain, cat odor, dapsone, Dopamine, infection, medication, parasite-altered behaviour, pyrimethamine, rattus-norvegicus, Schizophrenia, Toxoplasma gondii

BehaviorMental health

Look what the cat dragged in: do parasites contribute to human cultural diversity?

October 30, 2005
Lafferty, K.D.
Behavioural Processes 2005; 68: 279-282
Tagged: behavior, cats, culture, mice, performance, personality, rats, rattus-norvegicus, Toxoplasma gondii, toxoplasma gondii infection

BehaviorPersonality

Rats, cats, people and parasites: the impact of latent toxoplasmosis on behaviour

November 7, 2001
Webster, J. P.
Microbes and Infection 2001; 3: 1037-1045
Click for abstract
The manipulation hypothesis states a parasite may alter host behaviour for its own benefit, often by enhancing its transmission rate through the food chain. This paper reviews studies on the potential impact of one parasite, Toxoplasma gondii, on host behaviour, both on rodents, where altered responses may be proposed to benefit the parasite, and humans, where altered responses may arise as a side-effect of infection with no current adaptive significance. (C) 2001 Editions scientifiques et medicales Elsevier SAS.

Tagged: behaviour, congenital toxoplasmosis, gondii, infections, manipulation., mice, mouse, Parasite, personality, prevalence, rattus-norvegicus, toxoplasmosis, transmission, wild brown-rats

BehaviorMental health

Topics

  • Behavior 105
  • Cognitive functions 64
  • Mental health 439
  • Morphology 6
  • Motor functions 10
  • Personality 36
  • Physical health 134
  • Reproduction 36
  • Reviews 40
  • Sensory functions 3
  • Uncategorized 2

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Recent articles

  • Mortality Patterns of Toxoplasmosis and Its Comorbidities in Tanzania: A 10-Year Retrospective Hospital-Based Survey February 6, 2020
  • The role of latent toxoplasmosis in the aetiopathogenesis of schizophrenia–the risk factor or an indication of a contact with cat? February 6, 2020
  • The Association between Toxoplasma gondii Infection and Risk of Parkinson’s Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis February 6, 2020

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