Bioluminescence Imaging to Detect Late Stage Infection of African Trypanosomiasis.

Hollie Burrell-Saward; Theresa H Ward ORCID logo; (2016) Bioluminescence Imaging to Detect Late Stage Infection of African Trypanosomiasis. Journal of visualized experiments, 2016 (111). e54032-. ISSN 1940-087X DOI: 10.3791/54032
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Human African trypanosomiasis (HAT) is a multi-stage disease that manifests in two stages; an early blood stage and a late stage when the parasite invades the central nervous system (CNS). In vivo study of the late stage has been limited as traditional methodologies require the removal of the brain to determine the presence of the parasites. Bioluminescence imaging is a non-invasive, highly sensitive form of optical imaging that enables the visualization of a luciferase-transfected pathogen in real-time. By using a transfected trypanosome strain that has the ability to produce late stage disease in mice we are able to study the kinetics of a CNS infection in a single animal throughout the course of infection, as well as observe the movement and dissemination of a systemic infection. Here we describe a robust protocol to study CNS infections using a bioluminescence model of African trypanosomiasis, providing real time non-invasive observations which can be further analyzed with optional downstream approaches.


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