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Dive into the research topics where Holger Mayta is active.

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Featured researches published by Holger Mayta.


The Lancet | 2004

Species identification after treatment for human taeniasis

Cesar Jeri; Robert H. Gilman; Andres G. Lescano; Holger Mayta; Maria E. Ramirez; Armando E. Gonzalez; Rahim Nazerali; Hector H. Garcia

Identification of species of human tapeworms is crucial because the consequences of infection by Taenia solium and T saginata are very different. However, evacuation of species-identifiable tapeworms is uncommon and Taenia spp eggs are indistinguishable under the microscope. Treatment of taeniasis consists of niclosamide followed by a purgative. Recently, we adopted preniclosamide and postniclosamide electrolyte-polyethyleneglycol salt (EPS) purges to improve bowel cleaning. Retrospective comparison of traditional castor oil with EPS purge showed that recovery of the tapeworm scolex was significantly improved (20 of 68 vs none of 46, p=0.0001) in the EPS group. Furthermore, 42 of 68 (62%) individuals receiving EPS excreted identifiable gravid proglottids. EPS treatment helps the visual identification of Taenia spp.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2008

Nested PCR for Specific Diagnosis of Taenia solium Taeniasis

Holger Mayta; Robert H. Gilman; Emily Prendergast; Janeth P. Castillo; Yeny O. Tinoco; Hector H. Garcia; Armando E. Gonzalez; Charles R. Sterling

ABSTRACT Taeniasis due to Taenia solium is a disease with important public health consequences, since the larval stage is not exclusive to the animal intermediate, the pig, but also infects humans, causing neurocysticercosis. Early diagnosis and treatment of T. solium tapeworm carriers is important to prevent human cysticercosis. Current diagnosis based on microscopic observation of eggs lacks both sensitivity and specificity. In the present study, a nested-PCR assay targeting the Tso31 gene was developed for the specific diagnosis of taeniasis due to T. solium. Initial specificity and sensitivity testing was performed using stored known T. solium-positive and -negative samples. The assay was further analyzed under field conditions by conducting a case-control study of pretreatment stool samples collected from a population in an area of endemicity. Using the archived samples, the assay showed 97% (31/32) sensitivity and 100% (123/123) specificity. Under field conditions, the assay had 100% sensitivity and specificity using microscopy/enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay coproantigen testing as the gold standards. The Tso31 nested PCR described here might be a useful tool for the early diagnosis and prevention of taeniasis/cysticercosis.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Post-treatment vascular leakage and inflammatory responses around brain cysts in porcine neurocysticercosis.

Siddhartha Mahanty; Miguel A. Orrego; Holger Mayta; Miguel Marzal; Carla Cangalaya; Adriana Paredes; Eloy Gonzales-Gustavson; Gianfranco Arroyo; Armando E. Gonzalez; Cristina Guerra-Giraldez; Hector H. Garcia; Theodore E. Nash

Cysticidal treatment of neurocysticercosis, an infection of humans and pig brains with Taenia solium, results in an early inflammatory response directed to cysts causing seizures and focal neurological manifestations. Treatment-induced pericystic inflammation and its association with blood brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction, as determined by Evans blue (EB) extravasation, was studied in infected untreated and anthelmintic-treated pigs. We compared the magnitude and extent of the pericystic inflammation, presence of EB-stained capsules, the level of damage to the parasite, expression of genes for proinflammatory and regulatory cytokines, chemokines, and tissue remodeling by quantitative PCR assays between treated and untreated infected pigs and between EB-stained (blue) and non stained (clear) cysts. Inflammatory scores were higher in pericystic tissues from EB-stained cysts compared to clear cysts from untreated pigs and also from anthelmintic-treated pigs 48 hr and 120 hr after treatment. The degree of inflammation correlated with the severity of cyst wall damage and both increased significantly at 120 hours. Expression levels of the proinflammatory genes for IL-6, IFN-γ, TNF-α were higher in EB-stained cysts compared to clear cysts and unaffected brain tissues, and were generally highest at 120 hr. Additionally, expression of some markers of immunoregulatory activity (IL-10, IL-2Rα) were decreased in EB-stained capsules. An increase in other markers for regulatory T cells (CTLA4, FoxP3) was found, as well as significant increases in expression of two metalloproteases, MMP1 and MMP2 at 48 hr and 120 hr post-treatment. We conclude that the increase in severity of the inflammation caused by treatment is accompanied by both a proinflammatory and a complex regulatory response, largely limited to pericystic tissues with compromised vascular integrity. Because treatment induced inflammation occurs in porcine NCC similar to that in human cases, this model can be used to investigate mechanisms involved in host damaging inflammatory responses and agents or modalities that may control damaging post treatment inflammation.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2003

Evaluation of a PCR-Based Universal Heteroduplex Generator Assay as a Tool for Rapid Detection of Multidrug-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Peru

Holger Mayta; Robert H. Gilman; Fanny Arenas; Teresa Valencia; Luz Caviedes; Sonia H. Montenegro; Eduardo Ticona; Jaime Ortiz; Rosa Chumpitaz; Carlton A. Evans; Diana L. Williams

ABSTRACT Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is an increasing health problem worldwide, especially in developing countries. The PCR-UHG-Rif assay, which detects mutations within the rpoB gene associated with rifampin resistance, was evaluated for its ability and reliability to detect and identify drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a developing country where tuberculosis is highly endemic.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

A Comparative Study of Peripheral Immune Responses to Taenia solium in Individuals with Parenchymal and Subarachnoid Neurocysticercosis

Iskra Tuero; Sandra Palma; Franco Cabeza; Sarah Saleemi; Silvia Rodriguez; Isidro Gonzales; Holger Mayta; Siddhartha Mahanty; Hector H. Garcia; Robert H. Gilman

Background The ability of Taenia solium to modulate the immune system likely contributes to their longevity in the human host. We tested the hypothesis that the nature of the immune response is related to the location of parasite and clinical manifestations of infection. Methodology Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were obtained from untreated patients with neurocysticercosis (NCC), categorized as having parenchymal or subarachnoid infection by the presence of cysts exclusively within the parenchyma or in subarachnoid spaces of the brain, and from uninfected (control) individuals matched by age and gender to each patient. Using multiplex detection technology, sera from NCC patients and controls and cytokine production by PBMC after T. solium antigen (TsAg) stimulation were assayed for levels of inflammatory and regulatory cytokines. PBMC were phenotyped by flow cytometry ex vivo and following in vitro stimulation with TsAg. Principal Findings Sera from patients with parenchymal NCC demonstrated significantly higher Th1 (IFN-γ/IL-12) and Th2 (IL-4/IL-13) cytokine responses and trends towards higher levels of IL-1β/IL-8/IL-5 than those obtained from patients with subarachnoid NCC. Also higher in vitro antigen-driven TNF-β secretion was detected in PBMC supernatants from parenchymal than in subarachnoid NCC. In contrast, there was a significantly higher IL-10 response to TsAg stimulation in patients with subarachnoid NCC compared to parenchymal NCC. Although no differences in regulatory T cells (Tregs) frequencies were found ex vivo, there was a trend towards greater expansion of Tregs upon TsAg stimulation in subarachnoid than in parenchymal NCC when data were normalized for the corresponding controls. Conclusions/Significance T. solium infection of the subarachnoid space is associated with an enhanced regulatory immune response compared to infection in the parenchyma. The resulting anti-inflammatory milieu may represent a parasite strategy to maintain a permissive environment in the host or diminish inflammatory damage from the host immune response in the central nervous system.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2016

Etiological Role and Repeated Infections of Sapovirus among Children Aged Less than 2 Years in a Cohort Study in a Peri-urban Community of Peru

Xiaofang Liu; Helena Jahuira; Robert H. Gilman; Alicia Alva; Lilia Cabrera; Michiko Okamoto; Hang Xu; Henry J. Windle; Dermot Kelleher; Marco Varela; Manuela Verastegui; Maritza Calderon; Gerardo Sanchez; Vanessa Sarabia; Sarah Blythe Ballard; Caryn Bern; Holger Mayta; Jean E. Crabtree; Vitaliano Cama; Mayuko Saito; Hitoshi Oshitani

ABSTRACT Human sapovirus has been shown to be one of the most important etiologies in pediatric patients with acute diarrhea. However, very limited data are available about the causative roles and epidemiology of sapovirus in community settings. A nested matched case-control study within a birth cohort study of acute diarrhea in a peri-urban community in Peru from 2007 to 2010 was conducted to investigate the attributable fraction (AF) and genetic diversity of sapovirus. By quantitative reverse transcription–real-time PCR (qPCR) sapovirus was detected in 12.4% (37/299) of diarrheal and 5.7% (17/300) of nondiarrheal stools (P = 0.004). The sapovirus AF (7.1%) was higher in the second year (13.2%) than in the first year (1.4%) of life of children. Ten known genotypes and one novel cluster (n = 5) within four genogroups (GI, GII, GIV, and GV) were identified by phylogenetic analysis of a partial VP1 gene. Further sequence analysis of the full VP1 gene revealed a possible novel genotype, tentatively named GII.8. Notably, symptomatic reinfections with different genotypes within the same (n = 3) or different (n = 5) genogroups were observed in eight children. Sapovirus exhibited a high attributable burden for acute gastroenteritis, especially in the second year of life, of children in a Peruvian community. Further large-scale studies are needed to understand better the global burden, genetic diversity, and repeated infections of sapovirus.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2011

TsAg5, a Taenia solium cysticercus protein with a marginal trypsin-like activity in the diagnosis of human neurocysticercosis

Analiz Rueda; Cecilia Sifuentes; Robert H. Gilman; Andres H. Gutiérrez; Ruby Piña; Nancy Chile; Sebastián Carrasco; Sandra Larson; Holger Mayta; Manuela Verastegui; Silvia Rodriguez; Marcel Gutiérrez-Correa; Hector H. Garcia; Patricia Sheen; Mirko Zimic

Neurocysticercosis is an endemic parasitic disease caused by Taenia solium larva. Although the mechanism of infection is not completely understood, it is likely driven by proteolytic activity that degrades the intestinal wall to facilitate oncosphere penetration and further infection. We analyzed the publicly available T. solium EST/DNA library and identified two contigs comprising a full-length cDNA fragment very similar to Echinococcus granulosus Ag5 protein. The T. solium cDNA sequence included a proteolytic trypsin-like-domain in the C-terminal region, and a thrombospondin type-1 adherence-domain in the N-terminal region. Both the trypsin-like and adherence domains were expressed independently as recombinant proteins in bacterial systems. TsAg5 showed marginal trypsin-like activity and high sequence similarity to Ag5. The purified antigens were tested in a Western immunoblot assay to diagnose human neurocysticercosis. The sensitivity of the trypsin-like-domain was 96.36% in patients infected with extraparenchymal cysts, 75.44% in patients infected with multiple cysts, and 39.62% in patients with a single cyst. Specificity was 76.70%. The thrombospondin type-1 adherence-domain was not specific for neurocysticercosis.


Journal of Parasitology | 2009

A Novel Taenia solium Protein That Resembles Troponin T Proteins

Holger Mayta; Kathy Hancock; Robert H. Gilman; Roxana Zamudio; Janeth P. Castillo; Min Z. Levine; Hector H. Garcia; Armando E. Gonzalez; Victor C. W. Tsang

Abstract Taenia solium Linnaeus, 1758 is responsible for taeniasis and cysticercosis, which are 2 serious health problems, particularly in developing countries. The attempt to identify a 22.5kD possible protective oncospheral antigen by 2-dimensional gel-electrophoresis, micro-sequencing, and cDNA library screening produced a protein of 42kD that possesses a conserved domain similar to that of troponin T. Five variants that showed differences at the 5′ end were observed at the cDNA level. Hyper-immune rabbit sera developed against recombinant GST fused protein identified the protein exclusively on activated oncospheres. The 42kD protein was tested in an enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA) alone and then together with the Tso31 protein for the diagnosis of human cysticercosis. When both antigens were combined, the test was found to be 85% sensitive and 65% specific. The 42kD is a novel T. solium protein that is present exclusively on activated oncospheres of this parasite, with poor diagnostic activity against taeniasis or human cysticercosis.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2018

Epidemiology of Sapovirus Infections in a Birth Cohort in Peru

Gerardo J Sánchez; Holger Mayta; Monica J Pajuelo; Karen Neira; Liu Xiaofang; Lilia Cabrera; Sarah Blythe Ballard; Jean E. Crabtree; Dermot Kelleher; Vitaliano Cama; Caryn Bern; Hitoshi Oshitani; Robert H. Gilman; Mayuko Saito

This was the first birth cohort study with active surveillance of sapovirus infection in a developing country. High incidences of sapovirus infection and associated diarrhea during the first 2 years of life were reported. Sapovirus reinfection is common but rare with the same genotype.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2018

Antibody Banding Patterns of the Enzyme-Linked Immunoelectrotransfer Blot and Brain Imaging Findings in Patients With Neurocysticercosis

Gianfranco Arroyo; Silvia Rodriguez; Andres G. Lescano; Karen A. Alroy; Javier A. Bustos; Saul J. Santivañez; Isidro Gonzales; Herbert Saavedra; E. Javier Pretell; Armando E. Gonzalez; Robert H. Gilman; Victor C. W. Tsang; Hector H. Garcia; Isidro Gonzalez; Manuel Martinez; Manuel Alvarado; Manuela Verastegui; Mirko Zimic; Holger Mayta; Cristina Guerra; Yesenia Castillo; Yagahira Castro; Maria T Lopez; Cesar M. Gavidia; Luis Rodolfo Gomez; Luz M Moyano; Ricardo Gamboa; Claudio Muro; Percy Vilchez; Theodore E Nash

Background The enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot (EITB) assay is the reference serological test for neurocysticercosis (NCC). A positive result on EITB does not always correlate with the presence of active infections in the central nervous system (CNS), and patients with a single viable brain cyst may be EITB negative. Nonetheless, EITB antibody banding patterns appears to be related with the expression of 3 protein families of Taenia solium, and in turn with the characteristics of NCC in the CNS (type, stage, and burden of viable cysts). Methods We evaluated EITB antibody banding patterns and brain imaging findings of 548 NCC cases. Similar banding patterns were grouped into homogeneous classes using latent class analysis. The association between classes and brain imaging findings was assessed. Results Four classes were identified. Class 1 (patients negative or only positive to the GP50 band, related to the protein family of the same name) was associated with nonviable or single viable parenchymal cysticerci; class 2 (patients positive to bands GP42-39 and GP24, related to the T24-42 protein family, with or without anti-GP50 antibodies) was associated with intraparenchymal viable and nonviable infections; classes 3 and 4 (positive to GP50, GP42-39, and GP24 but also responding to low molecular weight bands GP21, GP18, GP14, and GP13, related to the 8 kDa protein family) were associated with extraparenchymal and intraparenchymal multiple viable cysticerci. Conclusions EITB antibody banding patterns correlate with brain imaging findings and complement imaging information for the diagnosis of NCC and for staging NCC patients.

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Hector H. Garcia

Cayetano Heredia University

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Manuela Verastegui

Cayetano Heredia University

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Armando E. Gonzalez

National University of San Marcos

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Mirko Zimic

Cayetano Heredia University

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Caryn Bern

University of California

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Andres G. Lescano

Cayetano Heredia University

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Maritza Calderon

Cayetano Heredia University

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Silvia Rodriguez

Cayetano Heredia University

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