José Juan Martínez’s research while affiliated with National Autonomous University of Mexico and other places

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Publications (5)


Persistent Taenia solium Cysticercosis In the State of Morelos, Mexico: Human and Porcine Seroprevalence
  • Article

July 2018

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86 Reads

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6 Citations

Journal of Parasitology

Julio Morales

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José Juan Martínez

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Nelly Villalobos

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[...]

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Edda Sciutto

Serological tests are needed to estimate the prevalence of Taenia solium cysticercosis in endemic rural areas. The predictive value of serum antibody levels to diagnose porcine cysticercosis and human neurocysticercosis (NC) was herein assessed by ELISA, using serum samples from 247 backyard pigs (141 without cysticercosis and 106 with cysticercosis) and 183 human subjects (116 non-NC subjects and 67 NC patients) in Central Mexico diagnosed by necropsy and computed tomography, respectively. A sensitivity of 77.3% and 92.5%, and a specificity of 88.6% and 100% were found to diagnose porcine and human cysticercosis, respectively. The prevalence of porcine and human cysticercosis in the State of Morelos was estimated by ELISA. Anti-cysticercal antibodies were found in 8.4% and 19.02% of assayed sera from 1,811 humans and 804 pigs, respectively. Marginalization and living in the Eastern region were risk factors for humans, whereas free-roaming, medium marginalization levels, and living in Sierra de Huautla were risk factors for pigs. These results clearly evidence the persistence of cysticercosis transmission and neurocysticercosis in a region neighboring Mexico City, pointing the need to apply effective measures already available for its control.


Recombinant S3Pvac-phage anticysticercosis vaccine: Simultaneous protection against cysticercosis and hydatid disease in rural pigs

February 2011

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37 Reads

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30 Citations

Veterinary Parasitology

This paper provides macroscopic and histological evidence on the statistically significant protective effects of S3Pvac-phage vaccination against porcine cysticercosis and hydatidosis. The study included 391 rustically bred pigs (187 vaccinated and 204 controls). Vaccination significantly reduced the prevalence of cysticercosis by 61.7%. Vaccination also significantly reduced by 56.1% the prevalence of hydatidosis caused by Echinococcus granulosus in pigs. The presence of the vaccine epitopes in both cestodes is probably involved in the cross-protection observed. Increased inflammation was found in 5% of cysticerci recovered from controls, versus 24% from vaccinated pigs (P<0.01). Hydatid cysts were non-inflammatory in either group. Vaccination was effective to prevent one single disease, but it failed to prevent the simultaneous infections with both parasites in a same pig. The widening of the S3Pvac-phage vaccine protective repertoire to include hydatidosis is a convenient feature that should reduce the prevalence of two frequent zoonoses that affect rustic porcine breading with a single action. Thus, the costs of two different vaccination programs would be reduced to a single one with significant reduction in both zoonoses.


Fig. 1. Flow chart, vaccination survey in 16 Mexicans communities (April 2004–July 2006). 
Table 1 Baseline characteristics Placebo (n = 421) S3Pvac-Phage (n = 626) P-Value
Table 4 Effect of biological and exposure variables on infection determined by necropsy
Table 5 Relevance of exposure and sexual factors in the vaccine efficacy in the 331 pigs diagnosed at necropsy
Table 6 Weight of the control and vaccinated pigs included in the trial
Inexpensive anti-cysticercosis vaccine: S3Pvac expressed in heat inactivated M13 filamentous phage proves effective against naturally acquired Taenia solium porcine cysticercosis
  • Article
  • Full-text available

July 2008

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338 Reads

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89 Citations

Vaccine

In search of reducing vaccine production costs', a recombinant M13 phage version of the anti-cysticercosis tripeptide vaccine (S3Pvac) was developed. The efficacy of S3Pvac-Phage vs. placebo was evaluated in a randomized trial that included 1,047 rural pigs in 16 villages of Central Mexico. Three to five months after vaccination 530 pigs were examined by tongue inspection. At 5-27 months of age, 331 pigs (197 vaccinated/134 controls) were inspected at necropsy. Vaccination reduced 70% the frequency of tongue cysticercosis and, based on necropsy, 54% of muscle-cysticercosis and by 87% the number of cysticerci.

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Spatial Distribution of Taenia solium Porcine Cysticercosis within a Rural Area of Mexico

February 2008

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245 Reads

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52 Citations

Cysticercosis is caused by Taenia solium, a parasitic disease that affects humans and rurally bred pigs in developing countries. The cysticercus may localize in the central nervous system of the human, causing neurocysticercosis, the most severe and frequent form of the disease. There appears to be an association between the prevalence of porcine cysticercosis and domestic pigs that wander freely and have access to human feces. In order to assess whether the risk of cysticercosis infection is clustered or widely dispersed in a limited rural area, a spatial analysis of rural porcine cysticercosis was applied to 13 villages of the Sierra de Huautla in Central Mexico. Clustering of cases in specific households would indicate tapeworm carriers in the vicinity, whereas their dispersal would suggest that the ambulatory habits of both humans and pigs contribute to the spread of cysticercosis. A total of 562 pigs were included in this study (August-December 2003). A global positioning system was employed in order to plot the geographic distribution of both cysticercotic pigs and risk factors for infection within the villages. Prevalence of pig tongue cysticercosis varied significantly in sampled villages (p = 0.003), ranging from 0% to 33.3% and averaging 13.3%. Pigs were clustered in households, but no differences in the clustering of cysticercotic and healthy pigs were found. In contrast, the presence of pigs roaming freely and drinking stagnant water correlated significantly with porcine cysticercosis (p = 0.07), as did the absence of latrines (p = 0.0008). High prevalence of porcine cysticercosis proves that transmission is still quite common in rural Mexico. The lack of significant differentiation in the geographical clustering of healthy and cysticercotic pigs weakens the argument that focal factors (e.g., household location of putative tapeworm carriers) play an important role in increasing the risk of cysticercosis transmission in pigs. Instead, it would appear that other wide-ranging biological, physical, and cultural factors determine the geographic spread of the disease. Extensive geographic dispersal of the risk of cysticercosis makes it imperative that control measures be applied indiscriminately to all pigs and humans living in this endemic area.


Therapeutic capacity of the synthetic peptide-based vaccine against Taenia solium cysticercosis in pigs

August 2005

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40 Reads

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31 Citations

Vaccine

The S3Pvac synthetic vaccine composed of three peptides (GK1, KETc1 and KETc12) effectively protect against pig cysticercosis. Preliminary results point to an additional cysticidal capacity induced by S3Pvac or GK1 immunization. Herein, clear evidences of the cysticidal effect of S3Pvac but not of GK1 are presented. S3Pvac immunization of already experimentally infected pigs induced a reduction in the parasite load, in the vesicular cysticerci and in their viability. It also substantially increases the percent of histological damaged cysticerci more importantly in muscles than in brains, with a concomitant reduction in the antibody levels. Thus, S3Pvac represents a powerful means of controlling cysticercosis infection in pigs.

Citations (5)


... First, we find that Sinaloa's HDI increases annually between 0.03% and 0.04%, and in fact, the number of rural communities decreased from 52 to 27% between 1970 and 2010 (INEGI, 2017). According to Díaz-Camacho et al. (1990, 1991, 30 years ago, 37-38% of houses in the studied area had dirt floors; in addition, 24-26% of the population practiced (Morales et al., 2018). Our data suggest that socioeconomic improvement is one key factor that must be considered for controlling Taenia transmission. ...

Reference:

Taenia solium: Socioeconomic changes and prevalence evolution in four endemic communities in northwestern Mexico
Persistent Taenia solium Cysticercosis In the State of Morelos, Mexico: Human and Porcine Seroprevalence
  • Citing Article
  • July 2018

Journal of Parasitology

... S3Pvac vaccine is composed by three small peptides (KETc1, KETc12, and GK1 [KETc7]), originally isolated from Taenia crassiceps and shared by other cestodes including T. solium. Both synthetic S3Pvac (Huerta et al. 2001) and S3Pvac recombinantly expressed in filamentous phages (Morales et al. 2008a(Morales et al. , 2011 were successfully tested in the field. HP6 antigen, originally isolated from Taenia saginata (Benitez et al. 1996) and reported to induce high protection levels against bovine cysticercosis (Lightowlers et al. 1996), has been found present in T. solium (HP6/Tsol18) cysticerci and showed a protective effect against porcine cysticercosis (Assana et al. 2010;Poudel et al. 2019;Nsadha et al. 2021). ...

Recombinant S3Pvac-phage anticysticercosis vaccine: Simultaneous protection against cysticercosis and hydatid disease in rural pigs
  • Citing Article
  • February 2011

Veterinary Parasitology

... Human cases of taeniasis and cysticercosis are often linked to various factors, including consuming undercooked or raw pork infested with T. solium cysticerci; open defecation; having free-foraging pigs at home; use of sewage sludge as fertilizer on pastures; and use of open water sources such as rivers, streams, wells, and lakes without proper boiling or decontamination measures [7,17,18]. Additionally, the lack of knowledge about porcine and human cysticercosis [19][20][21], along with poor practices such as raw meat consumption, backyard slaughter, and poorly maintained latrines that allow pigs access to human feces, can lead to human ingestion of T. solium eggs [22,23]. Moreover, free-roaming pigs, lack of meat inspection, lack of disease knowledge, and sewage spillage are associated with the epidemiology of taeniasis and neurocysticercosis [20]. ...

Spatial Distribution of Taenia solium Porcine Cysticercosis within a Rural Area of Mexico

... However, the study concluded that a single vaccination dose is ineffective in preventing the transmission of taenia solium in endemic regions [80]. Other clinical trials have also shown the efficacy of SP3VAC in the vaccination of pigs though there are limited clinical trials conducted presently on the use of this vaccine in the last decade [80][81][82]. ...

Therapeutic capacity of the synthetic peptide-based vaccine against Taenia solium cysticercosis in pigs
  • Citing Article
  • August 2005

Vaccine

... Or according to research by Hashemi et al., vaccination of mice with T7-M2e and without adjuvant elicited an M2e-specific serum antibody response, the efficacy of which was equivalent to that produced by M2e peptide administered within Freund's adjuvant 24 . Phages have been studied for use in the treatment of cancer, including melanoma 58 and liver cancer 84 , as well as for immunization against a variety of infectious illnesses, including Taenia solium cysticercosis 85 , human respiratory syncytial virus 86 While internal antigens, like NP, stimulate cellular immune responses, causing viral clearance and a quick recovery, surface antigens trigger humoral responses that neutralize influenza viruses. Consequently, in the current investigation, the surface antigens HA, NA, and M2, as well as the internal antigen NP, were selected for epitope identification with the aim of simultaneously provoking humoral and cellular immune responses 89 . ...

Inexpensive anti-cysticercosis vaccine: S3Pvac expressed in heat inactivated M13 filamentous phage proves effective against naturally acquired Taenia solium porcine cysticercosis

Vaccine