| Literature DB >> 25358755 |
Hemalatha Chandrasekaran1, Suresh Kumar Govind2, Chandrawathani Panchadcharam3, Premaalatha Bathmanaban4, Kalyani Raman5, Gaythri Thergarajan6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blastocystis sp., a widely prevalent intestinal protozoan parasite is found in a wide range of animals, including humans. The possibility of zoonotic transmission to human from birds especially ostriches led us to investigate on the cross infectivity of Blastocystis sp. isolated from the ostrich feces as well as the phenotypic and subtype characteristics. There is a need to investigate this especially with the rising number of ostrich farms due to the growing global ostrich industry.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25358755 PMCID: PMC4222385 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-014-0469-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
List of sequenced-tagged site (STS) primers
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| 1 | SB82 | 462 | F-TCTTGCTTCATCGGAGTC | AF166085 |
| R-CCTTCTCGCAGTTCTTTATC | ||||
| 1 | SB83 | 351 | F-GAAGGACTCTCTGACGATGA | AF166086 |
| R-GTCCAAATGAAAGGCAGC | ||||
| 2 | SB155 | 650 | F-ATCAGCCTACAATCTCCTC | AF166087 |
| R-ATCGCCACTTCTCCAAT | ||||
| 3 | SB227 | 526 | F-TAGGATTTGGTGTTTGGAGA | AF166088 |
| R-TTAGAAGTGAAGGAGATGGAAG | ||||
| 3 | SB228 | 473 | F-GACTCCAGAAACTCGCAGAC | AF166089 |
| R-TCTTGTTTCCCCAGTTATCC | ||||
| 3 | SB229 | 631 | F-CACTGTGTCGTCATTGTTTTG | AF166090 |
| R-AGGGCTGCATAATAGAGTGG | ||||
| 4 | SB332 | 338 | F-GCATCCAGACTACTATCAACATT | AF166091 |
| R-CCATTTTCAGACAACCACTTA | ||||
| 5 | SB340 | 704 | F-TGTTCTTGTGTCTTCTCAGCTC | AY048752 |
| R-TTCTTTCACACTCCCGTCAT | ||||
| 6 | SB336 | 317 | F-GTGGGTAGAGGAAGGAAAACA | AY048751 |
| R-GAACAAGTCGATGAAGTGAGAT | ||||
| 7 | SB337 | 487 | F-GTCTTTCCCTGTCTATTCTGCA | AY048750 |
| R-AATTCGGTCTGCTTCTTCTG |
Prevalence of sp. in ostrich isolates
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| 20 | 20 |
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| 17 | 17 |
Figure 1Comparison of Transmission electron microscopy and light microscopy of sp. for ostrich isolates and human isolates. A: Transmission electron micrograph showing an irregular shape Blastocystis sp. with a prominent nucleus (Nu) B: A thick, compact surface coat (sc) is seen to surround the cell when examined by transmission electron microscopy. A high electron dense area was observed in the central vacuole (CV). C: Numerous mitochondria (m) were seen in the Blastocystis sp. cells of the ostrich isolates. D: Higher magnification of Blastocystis sp. membrane in the ostrich faecal culture. E: A multi-vacoulated form (v) of Blastocystis sp. in human faecal culture with multiple mitochondria present in the cytoplasm. F: Higher magnification of Blastocystis sp. membrane in the human faecal culture. Note: the cell membrane of Blastocystis sp. in ostrich and human isolates were 235.48 to 345.22 nm and 184.70 to 208.72 nm, respectively. G: Light microscopic images of Blastocystis sp. isolated on day 3 of ostrich faecal culture stained with Sudan Black B. Positive reactions are seen as dark droplets in the central vacuole. Note: dark droplets (arrows). H: Light microscopic images of Blastocystis sp. isolated on day 3 of human faecal culture stained with Sudan Black B. No reactions were observed in the central vacuole.
Statistical comparison of membrane thickness of sp. isolated from ostrich and human (p < 0.05)
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| Ostrich | 235.48 - 345.22 | 284.05 ± 40.91 | 0.003 |
| Human | 184.70 - 208.72 | 197.81 ± 9.49 |
Figure 2Examples of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products from isolates of sp amplified by sequenced-tagged site (STS) primers. Lane 1, DNA size markers of a 100-bp DNA ladder plus; Lane 2, negative control; Lane 3, positive control; Lane 5, Lanes 7-10, Lanes 12-14; subtype 6 (317 bp).
Figure 3Examples of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products from isolates of from the cross-infection study amplified by sequenced-tagged site (STS) primers. Lane 1, DNA size markers of a 100-bp DNA ladder plus; Lane 2, negative control; Lane 3, positive control; Lanes 4-5, Blastocystis sp. cyst of ostrich isolate (inoculum); Lane 6-14, Blastocystis sp. isolates of infected rats; subtype 6 (317 bp).