| Literature DB >> 27014510 |
Shokoofeh Shamsi1, Jaydipbhai Suthar1.
Abstract
Pseudoterranovosis is a well-known human disease caused by anisakid larvae belonging to the genus Pseudoterranova. Human infection occurs after consuming infected fish. Hence the presence of Pseudoterranova larvae in the flesh of the fish can cause serious losses and problems for the seafood, fishing and fisheries industries. The accurate identification of Pseudoterranova larvae in fish is important, but challenging because the larval stages of a number of different genera, including Pseudoterranova, Terranova and Pulchrascaris, look similar and cannot be differentiated from each other using morphological criteria, hence they are all referred to as Terranova larval type. Given that Terranova larval types in seafood are not necessarily Pseudoterranova and may not be dangerous, the aim of the present study was to investigate the occurrence of Terranova larval types in Australian marine fish and to determine their specific identity. A total of 137 fish belonging to 45 species were examined. Terranova larval types were found in 13 species, some of which were popular edible fish in Australia. The sequences of the first and second internal transcribed spacers (ITS-1 and ITS-2 respectively) of the Terranova larvae in the present study showed a high degree of similarity suggesting that they all belong to the same species. Due to the lack of a comparable sequence data of a well identified adult in the GenBank database the specific identity of Terranova larval type in the present study remains unknown. The sequence of the ITS regions of the Terranova larval type in the present study and those of Pseudoterranova spp. available in GenBank are significantly different, suggesting that larvae found in the present study do not belong to the genus Pseudoterranova, which is zoonotic. This study does not rule out the presence of Pseudoterranova larvae in Australian fish as Pseudoterranova decipiens E has been reported in adult form from seals in Antarctica and it is known that they have seasonal presence in Australian southern coasts. The genetic distinction of Terranova larval type in the present study from Pseudoterranova spp. along with the presence of more species of elasmobranchs in Australian waters (definitive hosts of Terranova spp. and Pulchrascaris spp.) than seals (definitive hosts of Pseudoterranova spp.) suggest that Terranova larval type in the present study belong to either genus Terranova or Pulchrascaris, which are not known to cause disease in humans. The present study provides essential information that could be helpful to identify Australian Terranova larval types in future studies. Examination and characterisation of further specimens, especially adults of Terranova and Pulchrascaris, is necessary to fully elucidate the identity of these larvae.Entities:
Keywords: Anisakidae; Taxonomy; Terranova
Year: 2016 PMID: 27014510 PMCID: PMC4806596 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1722
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Scientific name and specimens/accession number of taxa used to build phylogenetic trees in the present study.
| Abbreviation | Scientific name | Specimen/Accession no. | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITS-1 | ITS-2 | |||
| A.brevispiculata |
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| A.brevispiculata1 |
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| A.pegreffii |
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| A.pegreffii1 |
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| A.physeteris |
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| A.physeteris1 |
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| A.simplexC |
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| A.simplexs.s. |
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| A.TMTP | Larva of |
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| A.typica |
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| A.typica1 |
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| A.ziphidarum |
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| C.bancrofti |
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| C.bancrofti1 |
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| C.eudyptulae |
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| C.margolisi |
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| C.microcephalum |
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| C.multipapillatum |
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| C.ogmorhini |
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| C.osculatumA |
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| C.osculatumB |
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| C.osculatumbaicalensis |
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| C.osculatumC |
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| C.osculatumD |
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| C.osculatumE |
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| C.radiatum |
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| C.rudolphiiA |
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| C.rudolphiiB |
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| C.rudolphiiD |
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| C.rudolphiiD1 |
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| C.rudolphiiE |
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| C.rudolphiiE1 |
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| C.septentrionale |
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| C.variegatum |
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| Contracaecumn.sp. |
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| H.aduncum1 |
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| H.aduncum2 |
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| H.auctum |
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| H.III |
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| H.III-1 |
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| H.IVA |
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| H.IVB |
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| H.IVGA |
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| H.IVGA1 |
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| H.IVGA2 |
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| H.IVGB |
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| H.IVGB1 |
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| H.IVGB2 |
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| H.V |
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| H.VI |
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| H.VII |
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| H.VIII |
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| Heterakisgallinarum |
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| P.azarasi |
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| P.bulbosa |
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| P.cattani |
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| P.decipiens |
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| P.decipiens1 |
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| R.acus |
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| Terranovasp. |
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| The present study | |
| Terranovasp.1 |
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| The present study | |
Figure 1Diagram of Terranova larval type found in the present study indicating taxonomically important features (scale-bars = 0.3 mm).
Morphological description of Terranova larval type found in the present study.
All measurements are given in millimetres. Mean measurements are given, followed by the range in parentheses.
| Taxonomically important morphological character | Measurement/description |
|---|---|
| Body length | 6.6 (3.0–9.0) |
| Body width | 0.24 (0.18–0.28) |
| Tooth | Present |
| Lips morphology | Inconspicuous |
| Distance of nerve ring from anterior end | 0.37 (0.22–0.72) |
| Location of excretory pore | At anterior end |
| Oesophagus length | 0.88 (0.4–1.14) |
| Ratio of oesophagus length to body length | 14.3 (9.5–26.5%) |
| Ventriculus length | 0.38 (0.24–0.54) |
| Intestinal caecum length | 0.71 (0.50–0.90) |
| Tail morphology | Strongly annulated, conical, tapering smoothly |
| Tail length | 0.13 (0.12–0.14) |
| Ratio of tail length to body length | 2.2% (1.3–4.0%) |
Figure 2Alignment of the sequences of the ITS-1 and ITS-2 regions of Terranova larval type II of Cannon, 1977c found in the present study.
The left column indicates the GenBank accession number of specimens. Numbers to the right of alignment indicate the alignment position. Polymorphic sites were designated using IUPAC codes.
Taxa listed under genera Terranova, Pulchrascaris and Pseudoterranova.
| Taxa | Host common name | Host scientific name | Location | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Red string ray | Taiwan Strait | |||
| Gummy shark | Bay of Islands, New Zealand | |||
| Tiger sharkk | Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA | |||
| Porcupine river stingray | Delta of the Orinoco River, Venezuela | |||
| Blotchy swell shark | Nagasaki, Japan | |||
| Common sawfish | Cameroon | |||
| West African crocodile Malayan crocodile | Ghana Northern Australia; Queensland; Malaya | |||
| Arapaima | Rivers of northern South America | |||
| Tiger shark Scalloped hammerhead Smooth hammerhead Blacktai reef shark | Twynams Paar, Ceylon; South Australia and Queensland, Australia; Natal, northern Brazil. | |||
| Nurse shark Spotted wobbegong Zebra shark | Tortugas, Florida, USA; off Queensland, Australia | |||
| Black caiman American alligator | Brazil | |||
| Tiger shark | Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA | |||
| Largetooth sawfish Snaggletooth shark Wallago | Ulubaria, India; Balgal, Queensland, eastern Australia | |||
| Shark | Kamchatka, USSR | |||
| The saltwater crocodile | Belgrade | |||
| Shark | Scientific name was not mentioned in the original description | Brazil | ||
| Shark | Cleveland Bay, Townsville, Australia | |||
| Largehead hairtail | Galveston Bay, Texas, USA; La Paloma, Uraguay | |||
| Arapaima | Rivers of northern South America | |||
| Indian threadfin | Galveston Bay, Texas, USA; Khulna, Pakistan | |||
| Angelshark | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | |||
| Brownbanded bambooshark Blacktip reef shark Gummy shark Scalloped hammerhead Smooth hammerhead Whitetip reef shark | Halfway Island, Australia; Hawaii, Alabama, USA; South Africa | |||
| Largehead hairtail | Galveston Bay, Texas, USA; La Paloma, Uraguay | |||
| Steller’s sea lion Californian sea lion Harbor seal Bearded seal | Japanese and Sakhalinese waters of the North Pacific Ocean | |||
| Bearded seal | Barents and Norwegian Seas, the Canadian Atlantic and the Sea of Japan, | |||
| South American sea lion | South-East Pacific, Chilean coast | |||
| Californian sea lion Harbor seal Harbor seal Grey seal Hooded seal Norhern elephant seal | North-East and North-West Atlantic | |||
| Harbor seal Grey seal | North-East Atlantic; Faeroe Islands | |||
| Antarctic Weddell seal | Antarctica |
Notes.
The species has been described based on a single female and should be redescribed.
Mozgovoi (1953) lists this species as Terranova serrata (Drasche 1884) while Bruce, Adlard & Cannon (1994) listed it as Porrocaecurn draschei (Stossich, 1896) and noted that there is some doubt as to which name has priority for this species.
This taxon was considered as junior synonym of T. galeocerdonis by Tanzola & Sardella (2006).
According to Johnston & Mawson (1945) T. nidifex may be identical to T. galeocerdonis.
This taxon was regarded as species inquirenda by Gibson & Colin (1982).
Now is known as Pulchrascaris secunda (Deardorff, 1987).
This species was considered as a synonym of T. secundum (Chandler, 1935) by Olsen (1952).
According to Deardorff (1987) this is a misidentification of host.
In the original description Cação panan was stated as type host which could not be assigned to any specific elsamobranch.
Pairwise comparisons of the nucleotide differences (%) in the consensus sequences of ITS-1 and ITS-2 between Terranova larval type found in the present study and Pseudoterranova spp. (the only taxa with closest ITS sequence similarity available in GenBank database).
| ITS-1 | ITS-2 | |
|---|---|---|
| 39.8 | 46.7 | |
| 38.9 | 48.4 | |
| 39.3 | 47.2 | |
| 39.0 | 48.3 | |
Figure 3Phylogenetic analysis of the combined ITS-1 and ITS-2 sequence data for members of the Anisakidae with Heterakis gallinarum as outgroup, using the neighbour-joining method.
Bootstrap support values are indicated. See Table 1 for detailed abbreviations. Note that Terranovasp and Terranovasp1 both belong to the same taxon and only different in polymorphic sites as shown in Fig. 2. They are representative of 93 Terranova larval type examined in the present study.
Figure 4Map shows reported cases of Terranova larval types (circles), Adult Terranova spp (asterisk), adult Pseudoterranova spp (square), adult Pulchrascaris (triangle), distribution of Australian sea lion (solid line), Australian fur seal (square dots) and New Zealand fur seal (round dot).