Department of Public Health and Infectious Diseases, Section of Parasitology, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2013 Apr 11;7(4):e2170. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002170. Print 2013.
The taxonomic distinctiveness of Ascaris lumbricoides and A. suum, two of the world's most significant nematodes, still represents a much-debated scientific issue. Previous studies have described two different scenarios in transmission patterns, explained by two hypotheses: (1) separated host-specific transmission cycles in highly endemic regions, (2) a single pool of infection shared by humans and pigs in non-endemic regions. Recently, A. suum has been suggested as an important cause of human ascariasis in endemic areas such as China, where cross-infections and hybridization have also been reported. The main aims of the present study were to investigate the molecular epidemiology of human and pig Ascaris from non-endemic regions and, with reference to existing data, to infer the phylogenetic and phylogeographic relationships among the samples.
151 Ascaris worms from pigs and humans were characterized using PCR-RFLP on nuclear ITS rDNA. Representative geographical sub-samples were also analysed by sequencing a portion of the mitochondrial cox1 gene, to infer the extent of variability at population level. Sequence data were compared to GenBank sequences from endemic and non-endemic regions.
No fixed differences between human and pig Ascaris were evident, with the exception of the Slovak population, which displays significant genetic differentiation. The RFLP analysis confirmed pig as a source of human infection in non-endemic regions and as a corridor for the promulgation of hybrid genotypes. Epidemiology and host-affiliation seem not to be relevant in shaping molecular variance. Phylogenetic and phylogeographical analyses described a complex scenario, involving multiple hosts, sporadic contact between forms and an ancestral taxon referable to A. suum.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results suggest the existence of homogenizing gene flow between the two taxa, which appear to be variants of a single polytypic species. This conclusion has implications on the systematics, transmission and control programs relating to ascariasis.
作为世界上最重要的两种线虫之一,蛔虫和猪蛔虫的分类独特性仍然是一个备受争议的科学问题。先前的研究描述了两种不同的传播模式,这可以用两种假说解释:(1)在高度流行地区,宿主特异性的传播循环是分开的;(2)在非流行地区,人类和猪共享一个单一的感染池。最近,猪蛔虫被认为是中国等流行地区人类蛔虫病的一个重要原因,在这些地区也有交叉感染和杂交的报道。本研究的主要目的是调查非流行地区人类和猪蛔虫的分子流行病学,并参考现有数据推断样本之间的系统发育和系统地理学关系。
使用核 ITS rDNA 的 PCR-RFLP 对来自猪和人类的 151 条蛔虫进行了特征描述。还对代表地理亚样本的部分线粒体 cox1 基因进行了测序,以推断种群水平的变异性程度。将序列数据与来自流行和非流行地区的 GenBank 序列进行了比较。
人类和猪蛔虫之间没有明显的固定差异,除了斯洛伐克种群,其显示出显著的遗传分化。RFLP 分析证实,猪是在非流行地区人类感染的来源,也是杂交基因型传播的途径。流行病学和宿主归属似乎与塑造分子方差无关。系统发育和系统地理学分析描述了一个复杂的情景,涉及多个宿主、形式之间的偶发接触以及一个可归属于猪蛔虫的祖先分类群。
结论/意义:这些结果表明,这两个类群之间存在同质化的基因流动,它们似乎是单一多态种的变体。这一结论对蛔虫的系统学、传播和控制计划有影响。