Almeida Gregório Guilherme, Coscarelli Daniel, Melo Maria Norma, Melo Alan Lane, Pinto Hudson Alves
Departamento de Parasitologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil.
Departamento de Parasitologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil.
Parasitol Int. 2016 Oct;65(5 Pt A):428-31. doi: 10.1016/j.parint.2016.05.014. Epub 2016 May 25.
Species of the genus Spirometra are diphyllobothriid tapeworms with complex life cycles and are involved in human sparganosis, a neglected disease that affects individuals worldwide. Although some species were reported in wild felids and human cases of sparganosis were described in Brazil, the biology and taxonomy of these parasites are poorly understood. In the present study, samples of diphyllobothriids (eggs and/or proglottids) obtained from the stools of wild carnivores (Leopardus pardalis and Lycalopex vetulus) and plerocercoid larvae found in a snake (Crotalus durissus) from Brazil were analysed by amplifying a fragment of the gene cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (cox 1). The DNA sequences obtained here for the first time from the Spirometra spp. from Brazil were used to evaluate the phylogenetic relationships with other species. Molecular data identified two species in the Brazilian samples (evolutionary divergence of 17.8-19.2%). The species were identified as Spirometra sp. 1, found in Le. pardalis, and Spirometra sp. 2 found in Ly. vetulus and C. durissus, and they differed from Asian isolates of Spirometra erinaceieuropaei (17.5-20.2% and 12.2-15.6%, respectively), a species previously considered to be distributed worldwide. Moreover, Spirometra sp. 1 is genetically distinct from Sparganum proliferum from Venezuela (19.6-20.4%), while Spirometra sp. 2 is more closely related with the Venezuelan species (6.1-7.0%). Sequences of Spirometra sp. 2 revealed that it is conspecific with the Argentinean isolate of Spirometra found in Lycalopex gymnocercus (1.9-2.2%). Taxonomic and phylogenetic aspects related to New World species of Spirometra are briefly discussed.
裂头绦虫属的物种是具有复杂生命周期的双叶槽绦虫,与人体裂头蚴病有关,这是一种影响全球个体的被忽视疾病。尽管在野生猫科动物中报告了一些物种,并且在巴西也描述了人体裂头蚴病病例,但对这些寄生虫的生物学和分类学了解甚少。在本研究中,通过扩增细胞色素c氧化酶亚基1(cox 1)基因的片段,对从巴西野生食肉动物(豹猫和草原狐)粪便中获得的双叶槽绦虫样本(卵和/或节片)以及在一条蛇(杜氏响尾蛇)中发现的裂头蚴幼虫进行了分析。首次从巴西的裂头绦虫属物种获得的DNA序列用于评估与其他物种的系统发育关系。分子数据在巴西样本中鉴定出两个物种(进化分歧为17.8 - 19.2%)。这些物种被鉴定为在豹猫中发现的裂头绦虫属物种1,以及在草原狐和杜氏响尾蛇中发现的裂头绦虫属物种2,它们与先前被认为分布在全球的猬迭宫绦虫亚洲分离株不同(分别为17.5 - 20.2%和12.2 - 15.6%)。此外,裂头绦虫属物种1在基因上与委内瑞拉的增殖裂头蚴不同(19.6 - 20.4%),而裂头绦虫属物种2与委内瑞拉物种的关系更密切(6.1 - 7.0%)。裂头绦虫属物种2的序列显示它与在草原狐中发现的阿根廷裂头绦虫分离株同种(1.9 - 2.2%)。简要讨论了与新大陆裂头绦虫属物种相关的分类学和系统发育方面。