Theo Schetters

Theo Schetters
University of Pretoria | UP · Department of Veterinary Tropical Diseases

Extraordinary Professor; PhD

About

138
Publications
14,137
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3,258
Citations
Introduction
Theo Schetters is director of ProtActivity, a company that focuses on vaccine development against ticks and tick-borne protozoal infections, and coordinator of CATVAC a consortium that works on the development of a vaccine against Rhipicephalus microplus ticks. In this capacity he partners with Clinvet (CRO from Bloemfontein, South Africa). He is inventor of a recombinant vaccine against Babesia canis and B. divergens. This work has been carried out in collaboration with the University of Montpellier (France). The aim is to develop similar vaccines against B. bovis and B. bigemina (collaboration University of Pretoria and University of Montpellier).
Additional affiliations
June 2017 - present
University of Pretoria
Position
  • Professor
Description
  • Development of vaccines against ticks and tick borne diseases.
February 2014 - present
ProtActivity
Position
  • Parasitologist
March 2004 - August 2019
Université de Montpellier
Position
  • Professor
Description
  • Vaccination antiparasitaire

Publications

Publications (138)
Article
Full-text available
Background: Rhipicephalus microplus, an invasive tick species of Asian origin and the main vector of Babesia species, is considered one of the most widespread ectoparasites of livestock. The tick has spread from its native habitats on translocated livestock to large parts of the tropical world, where it has replaced some of the local populations o...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: Rhipicephalus microplus, an invasive tick species of Asian origin and the main vector of Babesia species, is considered one of the most widespread ectoparasites of livestock. The tick has spread from its native habitats on translocated livestock to large parts of the tropical world, where it has replaced some of the local populations of...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: Rhipicephalus microplus, an invasive tick species of Asian origin and the main vector of Babesia species, is considered one of the most widespread ectoparasites of livestock. The tick has spread from its native habitats on translocated livestock to large parts of the tropical world, where it has replaced some of the local populations of...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: Rhipicephalus microplus; an invasive tick species of Asian origin and the main vector of Babesia species, is considered one of the most widespread ectoparasites of livestock. The tick has spread from its native habitats on translocated livestock to large parts of the tropical world, where it has replaced some of the local populations of...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background:Rhipicephalus microplus;an invasive tick species of Asian origin and the main vector of Babesia pecies, is considered one of the most widespread ectoparasites of livestock. The tick has spread from its native habitats on translocated livestock to large parts of the tropical world, where it has replaced some of the local populations of Rh...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Rhipicephalus microplus is a hard tick species that has a high impact on cattle health and production in tropical and subtropical regions. Recently, ribosomal DNA and morphological analysis resulted in the reinstatement of R. australis as a separate species from R. microplus. Both feed on cattle and can transmit bovine pathogens such a...
Article
Full-text available
Dogs that are infected with Babesia canis parasites usually show severe clinical signs, yet often very few parasites are detectable in the blood circulation. The results showed that large numbers of B. canis-infected red blood cells accumulate in the microvasculature of infected subjects. The initial process leading to the attachment of infected er...
Article
The increase in human babesiosis is of major concern to health authorities. In the USA, most of these cases are due to infections with Babesia microti, whereas in Europe B. divergens is the major cause of clinical disease in humans. Here we review the immunological and biological literature of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored merozoite p...
Chapter
Classically, tick infestation is controlled using acaricides that are administered as pour‐ons, by dipping, or by spray race. Because of the continuous pressure of tick infestation and the decrease of active compound over time after administration, selection of relatively resistant ticks is a given. As a result of this, in all geographic areas resi...
Article
Results: showed that the first appearance of antibody reactivity against a protein that migrated at the 39kDa position in SDS-PAGE gels was associated with the moment vaccinated dogs started to recover from a virulent challenge infection. In addition, pulse-chase experiments revealed that a 39-40kDa doublet was released into the supernatant of B....
Article
Full-text available
Background Rhipicephalus microplus is a hard tick that has a major impact on cattle health in tropical and subtropical regions because it feeds on cattle and is implicated in the transmission of pathogens that cause diseases such as bovine anaplasmosis and babesiosis. Presently, acaricides are used to control tick infestation but this is becoming i...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
A meeting sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation was held at the Avanti Hotel, Mohammedia, Morocco, July 14–15, 2015. The meeting resulted in the formation of the Cattle Tick Vaccine Consortium (CATVAC).
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Article
Full-text available
Ixodes ricinus transmits bacterial, protozoal and viral pathogens, causing disease and forming an increasing health concern in Europe. ANTIDotE is an European Commission funded consortium of seven institutes, which aims to identify and characterize tick proteins involved in feeding and pathogen transmission. The knowledge gained will be used to dev...
Article
We report here the resonance assignment of EDK-∆-Bd37, conformational mutant potentially displaying the “open” conformation of Bd37, a 25 kDa surface protein from the Apicomplexa parasite Babesia divergens that could undergo drastic conformational changes during erythrocyte invasion.
Article
Full-text available
We have sequenced the genome of the emerging human pathogen Babesia microti and compared it with that of other protozoa. B. microti has the smallest nuclear genome among all Apicomplexan parasites sequenced to date with three chromosomes encoding ∼3500 polypeptides, several of which are species specific. Genome-wide phylogenetic analyses indicate t...
Article
Babesiosis, recognized since ancient times as an important disease of livestock and more recently as an emerging disease in dogs worldwide, is caused by intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Babesia and is transmitted by ticks. The pathophysiology of canine babesiosis has been extensively studied but many questions remain unanswered, especially r...
Article
Full-text available
Babesiosis (formerly known as piroplasmosis) is a tick-borne disease caused by the intraerythrocytic development of protozoa parasites from the genus Babesia. Like Plasmodium falciparum, the agent of Malaria, or Toxoplasma gondii, responsible for the human toxoplasmosis, Babesia belongs to the Apicomplexa family. Babesia canis is the agent of the c...
Chapter
SummaryA series of measures is being used to control infectious diseases that comprise management practices such as hygiene, sanitation, pasture management, vector control, the use of chemotherapeutics, and vaccines. Especially in the case of apicomplexan parasites, chemotherapeutics aiding the control of vector and parasite infestations are being...
Article
Soluble parasite antigens (SPA) from Babesia canis have been shown to induce protective immunity when used as vaccine. In order to explain the immune mechanisms of vaccination, the precise role of SPA in the pathogenesis of canine babesiosis is under investigation. Earlier studies suggested that the plasma kallikrein system is central in the pathog...
Article
Full-text available
Babesia rossi, an intraerythrocytic protozoan, causes a severe, often life-threatening disease of domestic dogs. Dogs treated early for B. rossi infection usually recover from the disease, but dogs left untreated or treated at a later stage of infection seldom survive. Dogs infected with B. rossi have varied clinical manifestations that can be cate...
Article
East Coast Fever is a tick-transmitted disease in cattle caused by Theileria parva protozoan parasites. Quantification of the clinical disease can be done by determining a number of variables, derived from parasitological, haematological and rectal temperature measurements as described by Rowlands et al. (2000). From a total of 13 parameters a sing...
Chapter
Ancient Cultural PracticesRational Vaccine DevelopmentImmunologyNatural ImmunityControl of Infectious DiseasesConclusion References
Article
Full-text available
Babesia canis and B. rossi are large Babesia species that infect dogs and cause clinical disease. The spectrum of disease is highly diverse with either parasite, but upon evaluation of field cases it has been suggested that in general B. rossi is more virulent than B. canis. This difference was also found in experimental infections using B. canis a...
Article
A detailed haematological study of dogs that were infected with low, moderate or high numbers of Babesia canis-infected red blood cells was performed in an attempt to elucidate the pathogenesis early after B. canis infection. Results showed that upon infection the C-reactive protein (CRP) level in plasma increased prior to the detection of parasite...
Article
Veterinary vaccines currently available in Europe and in other parts of the world are developed by the veterinary pharmaceutical industry. The development of a vaccine for veterinary use is an economic endeavour that takes many years. There are many obstacles along the path to the successful development and launch of a vaccine. The industrial devel...
Article
Babesia divergens is the Apicomplexa agent of the bovine babesiosis in Europe: this infection leads to growth and lactation decrease, so that economical losses due to this parasite are sufficient to require the development of a vaccine. The major surface antigen of B. divergens has been described as a 37 kDa protein glycosyl phosphatidyl inositol (...
Article
The original observation of Sibinovic that soluble parasite antigens (SPA) of B. canis could be used to protect dogs against challenge infection formed the starting point for the development of an effective vaccine. With the advent of in vitro cultivation techniques for haemoprotozoan parasites an important tool became available for the commercial...
Article
Antiparasitic drugs have been used successfully to control parasitic diseases in animals for many years, as they are safe, cheap and effective against a broad spectrum of parasites. One drawback of this success appears to be the emergence of drug resistance in many target parasites. Moreover, issues of residues in the food chain and environment hav...
Article
Summary Antiparasitic drugs have been used successfully to control parasitic diseases in animals for many years, as they are safe, cheap and effective against a broad spectrum of parasites. One drawback of this success appears to be the emergence of drug resistance in many target parasites. Moreover, issues of residues in the food chain and environ...
Article
Soluble parasite antigens (SPA) from different Babesia species have been shown earlier to induce protective immunity when used as vaccine. However, initial attempts to produce such vaccine against Babesia rossi infection using SPA from B. rossi culture supernatants were not or only partially successful. Here we show that when dogs were vaccinated w...
Article
The Bd37gene encoding for a glycosyl-phosphatidyl-inositol anchored protein of Babesia divergens displays genetic polymorphisms among isolates. Five major polymorphic groups (clades) were shown by PCR-RFLP among different B. divergens isolates. Each group has been characterized according to a reference Bd37 gene (Rouen87, W8843, Y5, 6303E and 1705B...
Article
Microscopic examination of Giemsa-stained peripheral blood smears collected from three naturally infected dogs originating from Turkey revealed the presence of large (around 4.5-5.0 microm) intraerythrocytic Babesia parasites in all dogs. DNA was extracted from the three infected blood samples and an around 410 bp portion of the 18S rDNA gene of Ba...
Article
Glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchor merozoite surface antigens (GPI-anchor MSA) are proposed to act in the invasion process of infective merozoites of Babesia into host erythrocytes. Because of their essential function in the survival of Babesia parasites, they constitute good candidates for the development of vaccines against babesiosis and they...
Article
It has previously been shown that dogs can be vaccinated against heterologous Babesia canis infection using a vaccine containing soluble parasite antigens (SPA) from in vitro cultures of B. canis and B. rossi that are adjuvanted with saponin. In the present study the onset and duration of immunity of vaccinated dogs were studied. Results showed tha...
Article
Although immunisation protocols for a wide variety of parasitic diseases have been developed, it is often questioned why these do not always reach the market. In this review information about the regulations and procedures that apply to licensing the production and marketing of medicinal preparations, especially parasite vaccines, is presented. The...
Article
Full-text available
Throughout Europe, bovine babesiosis is mainly caused by Babesia divergens, an Apicomplexan parasite transmitted by tick bites. The intra-erythrocytic development of B. divergens merozoites leads to haemolytic anaemia, and bovine babesiosis is responsible for economic losses in the agro-business industry. A totally efficient recombinant vaccine bas...
Article
Two novel baculovirus-derived recombinant Theileria parva p67 constructs were tested for their vaccine potential against East Coast fever. Boran calves were immunized with a his-GFP-p67 fusion protein (GFP:p67deltaSS) or with GP64:p67C, a protein fusion between a C-terminal domain of p67 and the baculovirus envelope protein GP64. Both GFP:p67deltaS...
Article
It has been known for several decades that the soluble parasite antigen (SPA) of several Babesia species can be used as a vaccine against the clinical manifestations of babesiosis. Originally observed in the plasma of infected animals, SPA can also be recovered from the supernatants of in vitro cultures of these parasites. Variable success has been...
Article
Most available antiparasitic drugs are safe, cheap and highly effective against a broad spectrum of parasites. However, the alarming increase in the number of parasite species that are resistant to these drugs, the issue of residues in the food chain and the lack of new drugs stimulate development of alternative control methods in which vaccines wo...
Article
This article summarises the most relevant data of presentations delivered at the 19th International Conference of the World Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology (WAAVP)held in New Orleans, LA, USA, from 10 to 14 August 2003) in a symposium session on bovine neosporosis. The symposium was organised by Juan Muñoz-Bielsa,Wicher H...
Article
In Europe, Babesia divergens is the major agent responsible for babesiosis in cattle and can occasionally infect splenectomised humans. Recently, we reported the characterisation of a 37 kDa exoantigen (Bd37) anchored in the merozoite membrane of B. divergens by a glycosylphosphatidyl-inositol. After phospholipase hydrolyse of the glycosylphosphati...
Article
Babesia divergens is an Apicomplexa transmitted to bovines by its acarian vector, the tick I. ricinus. Babesia divergens merozoites have an intraerythrocytic development in the blood of infected mammals. The nucleocytoplasmic transport system in this parasite is not yet characterized and no protein involvement in such transport has been described....
Article
Full-text available
As part of a search for homologous members of the Plasmodium falciparum Pf60 multigene family in the intraerythrocytic protozoan parasite Babesia canis, we report here the characterization of a cDNA of 1,115 bp, which was designated Bcvir for its potential viral origin. The Bcvir cDNA contained two overlapping open reading frames (ORFs) (ORF1 from...
Article
The immunoprotective potential of Babesia divergens antigens released in supernatants of in vitro cultures of the parasite is generally known. Among a number of parasite molecules, a 37 kDa protein has been found in the supernatants of Babesia divergens cultures. In this report the cloning and biochemical characterization of this protein, called Bd...
Article
Full-text available
Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of intact chromosomes from 2 isolates of each of the 2 most pathogenic species of large Babesia parasites that infect dogs, i.e. Babesia canis (European species) and B. rossi (South African species), revealed 5 chromosomes in their haploid genome. The size of chromosomes 1-5 was found to be different in the 2 specie...
Article
Control of coccidiosis in chickens has relied upon managerial measurements and the prophylactic use of coccidiostatic drugs. With the emergence of Eimeria strains that are resistant to these drugs the use and number of commercially available vaccines has increased. In this review various aspects that contribute to the development of coccidiosis are...
Article
Soluble parasite antigens (SPA) from European Babesia canis can be used to protect dogs against a homologous but not heterologous challenge infection. In this study it is shown that when dogs are vaccinated with a mixture of SPA from both, a European B. canis isolate and a South African Babesia rossi isolate, protective immunity against heterologou...
Article
Sheep scab is an exudative dermatitis of the skin caused by the mite Psoroptes ovis. Mainly owing to safety reasons and the development of resistance to antiparasitics, new ways to control sheep scab are being sought. It has now been reported that sheep develop immunity after infection with the parasite [reviewed in Smith, W.D. et al. (2001) Res. V...
Article
A spin-off of malaria-vaccine research has been the development of immunological tests that allow the detection of malaria antigens in the peripheral blood, which could limit the prophylactic use of drugs. Two commercially available tests reveal the Histidine-rich protein 2 (HRP-2) of Plasmodium falciparum (ParaSight-F, Becton-Dickinson and ICT Mal...
Article
Parasites live at the expense of their host. To ensure survival of the parasite genome, it is important that the host survives at least until successful transmission of the parasite. The level of tetrahydrobiopterin (H4B) in Leishmania major parasites plays a crucial role in the development of the insect stage of the parasite into the metacyclic pa...
Article
Tropical theileriosis is caused by the protozoan parasite Theileria annulata and affects cattle from the Mediterranean to China. The parasite, which is transmitted by ticks, infects leukocytes to form macro- and microschizonts – microschizonts produce merozoites that can infect red blood cells. To control the disease, live attenuated vaccines consi...
Article
While waiting for the development of an effective malaria vaccine, attention has focused on prevention and treatment of the disease. Intervention strategies to reduce malaria transmission rely upon the use of insecticide-treated bed nets (ITBN) and residual house spraying (RHS). In a comparative study in South Africa, the use of ITBN, although more...
Article
Summary This paper discusses the relationship between the concept of reference and that of inference; the point is to indicate that contrary to the usual view it may be good to see the former as 'parasiting' on the latter, not the other way around. The paper is divided into two parts. In part one, I give an (unsystematic) overview of the developmen...
Article
Guidelines for submitting commentsPolicy: Comments that contribute to the discussion of the article will be posted within approximately three business days. We do not accept anonymous comments. Please include your email address; the address will not be displayed in the posted comment. Cell Press Editors will screen the comments to ensure that they...
Article
The malaria group in Nijmegen has lost a very valuable and respected researcher and colleague who greatly contributed to the success of their malaria research programme. Unexpectedly, on 13 April 2001, Ton Lensen died at home, aged 46. Ton started his malaria research career in 1979 as a technical assistant at the Department of Medical Parasitology...
Article
Global changes as diverse as changes in climate, mobility of people and animals, deforestation and forestation affect the ecology of a variety of organisms, including parasites. The re-emergence of recognized diseases, such as malaria and trypanosomiasis in countries where these diseases have been effectively controlled, is exemplary. In 1977, two...
Article
The founder of modern immunology, the embryologist Elie Metchnikoff, an enthusiastic supporter of Darwinism, proposed that evolutionary pressure imposed by microbiological challenge can cause genetic selection. A recent review on the recognition of pathogens supports this view [Fallon, P.G. et al. (2000) Trends Immunol. 22, 63–66]. Early invertebra...
Article
The strategy of inducing apoptosis in cells that are infected with intracellular parasites might not be as effective at reducing infection as was once thought [Lopes, M.F. et al. (2000) Immunol. Today 21, 489–494]. Apoptotic cells do not lyse, and are subsequently cleared by macrophages through a specific receptor (apoptotic cell receptor αv β3, vi...
Article
The Merial Award for Parasitology is given annually to a post-doc researcher from the Benelux countries who has conducted important and innovative research in the field of parasitology. The Merial Award 2000 went to a veterinary parasitologist, Jaap van Hellemond of the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, for his research on the anaerobic metab...
Article
Operational and communication networks remain crucial for the continuation of science development. From 1987, the Anaplasmosis–Babesiosis Network (ABN; receiving financial support from the Office of Agriculture, Bureau for Science and Technology of the US Agency for International Development; USAID) functioned as a platform for scientists in tick-t...
Article
Guidelines for submitting commentsPolicy: Comments that contribute to the discussion of the article will be posted within approximately three business days. We do not accept anonymous comments. Please include your email address; the address will not be displayed in the posted comment. Cell Press Editors will screen the comments to ensure that they...
Article
Several parasitic worms produce larvae that have the ability to penetrate the tissues of the host, and migrate to other organs; so-called larvae migrans. As some of these worms are zoonotic, they pose a threat to the human population. The larvae of Toxocara canis have been described to migrate to the eyes of their host, where they cause ocular toxo...
Article
Infections with certain species of Plasmodium and Babesia induce, among other symptoms, cerebral pathology. The finding of heavily parasitized cerebral capillaries upon postmortem examination has led to the assumption that blockage of capillaries with infected red blood cells caused the cerebral symptoms and subsequent death. As this type of cerebr...
Article
In the search for immunoprotective antigens of the intraerythrocytic Babesia canis rossi parasite, a new cDNA was cloned and sequenced. Protein sequence database searches suggested that the 41-kDa protein belongs to the phosphofructokinase B type family (PFK-B). However, because of the low level sequence identity (< 20%) of the protein both with ad...
Article
In the search for immunoprotective antigens of the intraerythrocytic Babesia canis rossi parasite, a new cDNA was cloned and sequenced. Protein sequence database searches suggested that the 41-kDa protein belongs to the phosphofructokinase B type family (PFK-B). However, because of the low level sequence identity (< 20%) of the protein both with ad...
Article
At 8 days after a primary Eimeria tenella infection, a subset of T cells, of which the protective role is as yet unclear, circulates in the peripheral blood. In order to investigate this, the in vitro cellular responsiveness of these peripheral blood lymphocytes has been used as selection criterion to identify potentially protective E. tenella spor...
Article
The parasites Babesia canis and Babesia gibsoni (phylum Apicomplexa) are responsible for canine babesiosis throughout the world. Babesia canis was previously described as a group of three biologically different subspecies, namely B. canis canis, B. canis vogeli, and B. canis rossi. We report partial sequences of small subunit ribosomal RNA gene (ss...

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