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Genotype of 86Toxoplasma gondiiIsolates Associated with Human Congenital Toxoplasmosis, and Correlation with Clinical Findings
Author(s) -
Daniel Ajzenberg,
Nadine Cogné,
Luc Paris,
M.-H. Bessières,
P. Thulliez,
Denis Filisetti,
Hervé Pelloux,
Pierre Marty,
MarieLaure Dardé
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the journal of infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.69
H-Index - 252
eISSN - 1537-6613
pISSN - 0022-1899
DOI - 10.1086/342663
Subject(s) - toxoplasmosis , toxoplasma gondii , genotype , asymptomatic , biology , congenital toxoplasmosis , microsatellite , genotyping , virology , immunology , pathology , allele , genetics , medicine , antibody , gene
To study the influence of Toxoplasma gondii genotypes on the severity of human congenital toxoplasmosis (asymptomatic, benign, or severe infection or newborn or fetal death), 8 microsatellite markers were used to analyze 86 T. gondii isolates collected from patients with congenital toxoplasmosis. Seventy-four different genotypes were detected, some identical genotypes originating probably from the same source of contamination. The 3 less polymorphic microsatellite markers associated with 6 isoenzymatic markers allowed a classification of isolates into the 3 classical types and detected atypical genotypes. Whatever the clinical findings, type II isolates were largely predominant (84.88% in the whole collection and 96.49% in 57 consecutive cases). Type I and atypical isolates were not found in asymptomatic or benign congenital toxoplasmosis. However, in 4 cases in which children were not infected despite isolation of T. gondii from placenta, only type I isolates were found.

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