Purified Trypanosoma cruzi specific glycoprotein for discriminative serological diagnosis of South American trypanosomiasis (Chagas' disease)
- PMID: 6138504
- DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(83)90453-1
Purified Trypanosoma cruzi specific glycoprotein for discriminative serological diagnosis of South American trypanosomiasis (Chagas' disease)
Abstract
Chagas' disease, leishmaniasis, and Trypanosoma rangeli infection are endemic and their distributions overlap in vast regions of South and Central America. Serological cross-reactivities can confuse epidemiological studies of these infections, and their differential diagnosis has been assigned a high priority by the World Health Organisation. A lectin-affinity-purified, 90,000 molecular weight glycoprotein (GP90) is present in the known principal strains (zymodemes) of Trypanosoma cruzi and absent from Leishmania and T rangeli. Patients with T cruzi infection have antibody to GP90, whereas patients with leishmaniasis do not and the two infections can be distinguished in an ELISA system using this antigen. In a mouse model, the same test can differentiate between T cruzi and T rangeli infections. Antigens purified by affinity chromatography clearly provide a practical basis for very precise, even strain-specific, diagnostic tests.
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