National Repository of Grey Literature 90 records found  beginprevious42 - 51nextend  jump to record: Search took 0.00 seconds. 
African rodents as reservoirs of Leishmania parasites.
Glanzová, Kristýna ; Sádlová, Jovana (advisor) ; Votýpka, Jan (referee)
Leishmania spp. (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae) are protozoa related to the Trypanosoma genus that are causative agents of leishmaniasis. Their life cycle alternates between mammalian hosts and insect vectors. The principal vectors are phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Phlebotominae) that occur mostly in the tropics, however, several species range to the temperate regions. Various species of rodents serve as reservoir hosts of leishmania. In endemic localities, they represent most abundant mammals and their burrows are used as breeding sites of larval stages of sand flies. In this bachelor thesis I summarize available literature about rodents that serve as reservoir hosts of six human pathogenic leishmania species present in Africa. Several species of African rodents are regarded as reservoir host of L. major and one species (Ctenodactylus gundi) as a suspected reservoir host L. tropica. On the other hand, rodent infections caused by L. aethiopica, L. infantum and L. donovani should be still considered as accidental. In the case of Leishmania sp. from Ghana, reservoir hosts are still entirely unknown. All species of proven African rodent reservoir hosts share clustered distribution in colonies where animals live in high population densities.
Monoxenous trypanosomatids of invertebrates
Havlová, Jolana ; Votýpka, Jan (advisor) ; Varga, Vladimír (referee)
The class Kinetoplastea contains free-living and parasitic species. One of the most dominant group within the class is the order Trypanosomatida which includes obligate parasites (Trypanosoma, Leishmania) infecting a wide range of hosts. Some species are serious pathogens of humans and domestic animals and cause considerable losses. However, the majority of trypanosomatids belongs to monoxenous parasites of insect which are usually harmless to their hosts. Monoxenous trypanosomatids predominantly infect Hemiptera and Diptera. This diploma thesis is focused on the detection of monoxenous trypanosomatids in cockroaches captured in the Czech Republic and cockroaches from different breedings. Cockroaches are very suitable mechanical vectors of many different pathogens (including parasites) and are significant health threat for humans and animals. First trypanosomatids in cockroaches were documented at the beginning of the 20th century, but there is no study focused on this topic specifically. Another aim of this thesis is morphological and ultramicroscopic analysis and the study of the host specificity of the recently described species Herpetomonas tarakana, isolated from a cockroach. My findings were partly used in the already published study "Diversity of trypanosomatids in cockroaches and the...
Sexual transmission of Toxoplasma gondii from males to females: experimental verification using laboratory animal model
Navrátil, Jiří ; Kodym, Petr (advisor) ; Votýpka, Jan (referee)
Toxoplasma gondii is cosmopolitly living parasite which prevalence in human extends to tens of percent. In its life cycle it uses any homoiothermic vertebrate as an intermediate host. The definitive host are felines from Felidae family. The acute phase of infection is medically important in immunocompromised pacients and by its risk of congenital toxoplasmosis in pregnant women who never suffered from this illness before. Infection could have serious and rarely even lethal consequences in both cases. This thesis focuses on experimental verification of theory of sexual transmission of toxoplasmosis from male to female on laboratory mice. Possible transmission was tested in acute phase and latent phase of infection. The result was negative in both cases. Moreover, we observed the parasite's affinity to tissue of organs in male mice by PCR technique. Particularly, our interest was in comparing genital organs with others. It was discovered that lungs and spleen are the most infected organs in acute phase of infection. Toxoplasma was also present in genital organs (especially in epididymis) but not more frequently than in others. We observed statistically significant difference between sexual and non-sexual organs in acute and latent toxoplasmosis - non-sexual organs were more infected in both phases....
Use of RNAi and CRISPR systems in genetic modifications of parasitic protists
Kaiserová, Veronika ; Votýpka, Jan (advisor) ; Stojanovová, Darja (referee)
In organisms, RNA interference serves as a defence mechanism against foreign nucleic acids. RNAi has a negative effect on translation, via the binding of small non-coding molecules to the complementary region of mRNA, resulting in its degradation. CRISPR, a new method of genetic engineering, is based upon modulating genetic expression via creating double-stranded breaks in target DNA, aided by a ribonucleoprotein complex, consisting of the prokaryotic endonuclease Cas9 and sgRNA. Both of the aforementioned methods can be utilised in functional analysis of proteins and the characterisation of metabolic pathways in organisms of interest. This work summarises the current state of knowledge regarding RNAi and CRISPR and their use in genome editing of parasitic protists.

National Repository of Grey Literature : 90 records found   beginprevious42 - 51nextend  jump to record:
Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.