Sunday, October 19, 2025

Non-Invasive In Vivo Study of the Trypanosoma vivax Infectious Process Consolidates the Brain Commitment in Late Infections

Authors: Simon D’Archivio, Alain Cosson, Mathieu Medina, Thierry Lang, Paola Minoprio, Sophie Goyard

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001976

Abstract Summary

Researchers developed a genetically modified strain of Trypanosoma vivax (a parasite causing sleeping sickness in animals) that glows with firefly luciferase, enabling real-time tracking of infections in mice. This breakthrough allows non-invasive monitoring of parasite spread through organs like spleen, liver, and brain, providing valuable insights into disease progression.

Why Brain? đź§ 

Study creates first bioluminescent T. vivax strain to track parasite spread in live mice, confirming brain invasion occurs in late-stage infections and validating new drug screening methods.

The image is AI-generated for illustrative purposes only. Courtesy of Midjourney.

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