Dias Neto E, Steindel M, Passos L K, de Souza C P, Rollinson D, Katz N, Romanha A J, Pena S D, Simpson A J
Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil.
EXS. 1993;67:339-45. doi: 10.1007/978-3-0348-8583-6_31.
Arbitrary primers have been used for the production of complex, PCR generated DNA profiles in order to undertake a preliminary random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis of strains (and related species) of two parasitic organisms that are responsible for important diseases endemic in Brazil: Schistosoma mansoni that causes schistosomiasis, and Trypanosoma cruzi that causes Chagas' disease. A relatively low level of polymorphism was found in S. mansoni when strains isolated from different regions of Brazil were compared, with less than 10% of bands exhibiting polymorphism. Comparison of different schistosome species, on the other hand, showed them to be distantly related with very few bands shared by even the more closely related species. Trypanosome strains were found to be much more variable. When strains were compared between zymodemes (groups of parasite strains with the same isoenzyme profiles), a maximum of 7% of bands were found to be common whereas among strains in the same zymodeme a clear characteristic pattern was observed. In the zymodeme most thoroughly studied, it was found that 59% of bands were shared. Band sharing analysis showed that the relationships of strains within a zymodeme correlate with their geographical origin and that the relationship between zymodemes correlates closely with that previously determined by isoenzyme analysis. These preliminary data indicate the ready applicability of RAPD analysis to the study of parasites where largely unexplored genetic variations may have an important bearing on the complexity and diversity of diseases.
为了对巴西两种引起重要地方病的寄生生物菌株(及相关物种)进行初步的随机扩增多态性DNA(RAPD)分析,已使用任意引物来产生复杂的、由PCR生成的DNA图谱。这两种寄生生物分别是导致血吸虫病的曼氏血吸虫和导致恰加斯病的克氏锥虫。当比较从巴西不同地区分离出的曼氏血吸虫菌株时,发现其多态性水平相对较低,不到10%的条带表现出多态性。另一方面,对不同血吸虫物种的比较表明它们亲缘关系较远,即使是亲缘关系较近的物种也只有极少数条带相同。发现锥虫菌株的变异性要大得多。当在酶型(具有相同同工酶谱的寄生虫菌株组)之间比较菌株时,发现最多7%的条带是共同的,而在同一酶型的菌株中观察到明显的特征模式。在研究最深入的酶型中,发现59%的条带是共享的。条带共享分析表明,酶型内菌株之间的关系与其地理起源相关,并且酶型之间的关系与先前通过同工酶分析确定的关系密切相关。这些初步数据表明RAPD分析可轻易应用于寄生虫研究,在这类研究中,大量未被探索的遗传变异可能对疾病的复杂性和多样性具有重要影响。