a protozoan parasite, phylum Apicomplexan and often referred to as a coccidian
Toxoplasma
who does Toxoplasma infect?
infects most species of warm-blooded animals, including humans, but only multiply sexually in cats
- infect 1/3 of world popl’n = mostly asymptomatic
Toxoplasma lives an obligate intracell lifestyle and has a unique ability to…
invade host cells and evade immune system
two basic morphologies of toxoplasma
trophozoites and cysts
both extraintestinal and seen in several tissues
toxoplasma trophozoites
two gens: tachyzoites (fast multiplying), bradyzoites (inert or slow multiplying = at this point, huddle together to form cysts)
shape: crescentic, single nucleus; asexual multiplication via endodyogeny (internal budding)
T. gondii lytic cycle
process of invasion and destruction of host cell by indiv Toxoplasma trophozoites
- tachyzoite = initial invader = parasitophorous vacuole is thin membrane that protects it
- keep multiplying until host cell lysis
- parasite egress = frees out daughter trophozoites to start new cycle of destruction in neighbouring host cells
toxoplasma cysts
intestinal form of toxoplasma parasite
seen in cats only due to sexual repro (gamogony = jejunal epithelium of cats)
oocyst with two sporocysts containing 4 sporozoites; each protected with tough but flexible wall
pathogenesis of toxoplasmosis
conoid
main secretory organelles that participate in cell entry for toxoplasma
micronemes, thoptries, and dense granules
micronemes
T or F. Apicala complexes are unique to Toxoplasma gondii
F! seen in apicomplexans
rhoptries proteins
dense granules
organs affected by toxoplasma
retina (eyes)
brain
lymph nodes
liver
T or F. Transmission across placenta in a pregnant woman to fetus can only occur if toxoplasma was ingested after conception
T!
sites of invasion of Toxoplasma
Two phases of Toxoplasma during human stage
Early (acute) phase: - tachyzoites invading cells
- cell destruction/necrosis
- mononuclear cell inflammation
- blood vessel blockage
Late (chronic) phase:
- bradyzoites/tissue cysts
- latency/immunological evasion
- hypersensitivity
Reactivation of chronic infection after being latent
clinical picture of toxoplasmosis
ocular toxoplasmosis
can be seen during ophthalmoscopic eye exam = dull area where hemorrhage occurred
Neonatal Toxoplasmosis (2)
Transplacental transmission: acute toxoplasmosis in pregnancy
Congenital toxoplasmosis:
* abortion or stillbirth * CNS lesions = mental retardation
* eye involvement: blindness
toxoplasmosis in pregnancy:risk of congenital infection
first trimester = 5%, 60% of offsprings show clinical signs
2nd trimester = 40%, and 25% of offsprings show clinical signs
third trimester = 70%, 10% of offsprings show clinical signs
principal reservoir of toxoplasma
rodents