Authors
Wendy Gibson, Toby Backhouse, Andrew Griffiths
Publication date
2002/5/1
Journal
Infection, Genetics and Evolution
Volume
1
Issue
3
Pages
207-214
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The human serum resistance associated (SRA) gene isolated from a Ugandan strain of Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense has been shown to be capable by itself of conferring the trait of human infectivity on T.b. brucei by transfection. This gene has also been identified in several other isolates of T.b. rhodesiense, but not in the other human pathogenic trypanosome in Africa, T.b. gambiense, casting doubt on its ubiquity and function. Here, we show that this gene occurs in T.b. rhodesiense from sleeping sickness foci throughout East Africa (Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Botswana), but is not found in T.b. brucei isolates or any other trypanosomes of subgenus Trypanozoon. SRA genes from 10 T.b. rhodesiense isolates from five disease foci were compared and were 97.9–99.7% homologous, with three minor sequence variants. PCR amplification of this gene forms the basis of a new test to identify T.b …
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