Gaspar da Silva Daniela, Barton Emma, Bunbury Nancy, Lunness Patricia, Bell Diana J, Tyler Kevin M
BioMedical Research Centre, School of Medicine, Health Policy and Practice, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk NR4 7TJ, United Kingdom.
Infect Genet Evol. 2007 Jul;7(4):433-40. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2007.01.002. Epub 2007 Jan 16.
Columbids (pigeons and doves) are the primary host of Trichomonas gallinae, the flagellate protozoon which causes avian trichomoniasis, a widespread, often lethal disease. Although predominantly apathogenic, the organism is paradigmatic for the study of strain-specific virulence, with some strains causing greater than 75% mortality and epizootic die-offs in wildlife populations. In recent years, research on this important emerging pathogen has been neglected and genetic variation within the parasite has not hitherto been investigated. The pink pigeon (Columba mayeri), endemic to Mauritius and one of the world's rarest pigeons, suffers high levels of nestling/fledgling mortality from trichomoniasis. As a closed oceanic island population with recorded life-history parameters for all birds, this species represents a unique resource for the study of this host-parasite interaction. To investigate genetic variation within T. gallinae in Mauritian columbids, isolates were collected from pink pigeons and another widespread species, the Madagascar turtle-dove (Streptopelia picturata). Comparison of the 5.8S region of rDNA and surrounding internally transcribed spacer regions (ITS) showed no sequence variation between isolates or with an unrelated but previously sequenced T. gallinae isolate (Genbank). This confirmed all 24 isolates as T. gallinae, and defined this section of the genome as a good species marker. In contrast, Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis of the isolates revealed considerable genotypic variation between isolates. RAPD genotypes appeared to correlate with geographic distribution and host species, suggesting inter-species transmission and rapid host adaptation by the parasite.
鸽形目鸟类(鸽子和鸠类)是禽毛滴虫的主要宿主,禽毛滴虫是一种鞭毛虫原生动物,可引发禽毛滴虫病,这是一种广泛传播且往往致命的疾病。尽管该生物体大多无致病性,但它是研究菌株特异性毒力的典型范例,一些菌株可导致超过75%的死亡率,并在野生动物种群中引发 epizootic die-offs(此处epizootic die-offs 未明确对应准确中文术语,可保留英文)。近年来,对这种重要的新兴病原体的研究被忽视,寄生虫内部的遗传变异迄今尚未得到研究。粉红鸽(Columba mayeri)是毛里求斯的特有物种,也是世界上最稀有的鸽子之一,其雏鸟/幼鸟因毛滴虫病死亡率很高。作为一个对所有鸟类都有记录生活史参数的封闭海洋岛屿种群,该物种是研究这种宿主 - 寄生虫相互作用的独特资源。为了研究毛里求斯鸽形目鸟类中禽毛滴虫的遗传变异,从粉红鸽和另一种广泛分布的物种马达加斯加斑鸠(Streptopelia picturata)中收集了分离株。对核糖体DNA的5.8S区域和周围的内部转录间隔区(ITS)进行比较,结果表明分离株之间以及与一个无关但先前已测序的禽毛滴虫分离株(Genbank)之间没有序列变异。这证实了所有24个分离株均为禽毛滴虫,并将基因组的这一部分定义为一个良好的物种标记。相比之下,对分离株的随机扩增多态性DNA(RAPD)分析显示分离株之间存在相当大的基因型变异。RAPD基因型似乎与地理分布和宿主物种相关,表明该寄生虫存在种间传播和快速的宿主适应性。