| Literature DB >> 29914526 |
Narissara Jariyapan1, Teerada Daroontum2, Krit Jaiwong3, Wetpisit Chanmol4, Nuchpicha Intakhan4, Sriwatapron Sor-Suwan5, Padet Siriyasatien5, Pradya Somboon4, Michelle D Bates6, Paul A Bates7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leishmaniasis is an emerging disease in Thailand with an unknown incidence or prevalence. Although the number of properly characterized and clinically confirmed cases is about 20, it is suspected that this low number masks a potentially high prevalence, with clinical disease typically manifesting itself against an immunocompromised background, but with a substantial number of subclinical or cured cases of infection. To date leishmaniasis in Thailand has been mainly ascribed to two taxa within the recently erected subgenus Mundinia Shaw, Camargo & Teixeira, 2016, Leishmania (Mundinia) martiniquensis Desbois, Pratlong & Dedet, 2014 and a species that has not been formally described prior to this study.Entities:
Keywords: Cutaneous leishmaniasis; Leishmania orientalis; Mundinia; Thailand
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29914526 PMCID: PMC6006788 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-018-2908-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Clinical presentation of cutaneous leishmaniasis. a A nodule on the cheek and a crusted sore in the angle of the lips of the patient before treatment, both arrowed. b The same view of the patient’s skin after treatment
Fig. 2Histopathology of skin biopsy from a nodule on the left cheek (Giemsa stain). a Low power magnification photomicrograph showing pseudo-epitheliomatous hyperplasia of the epidermis (arrows) and heavy chronic inflammation of dermis (starbursts). b High power magnification photomicrograph showing numerous Leishmania amastigotes within the cytoplasm of macrophages and in the extracellular matrix (arrows). Scale-bars: a, 200 μm; b, 10 μm
Fig. 3Morphology of Giemsa-stained promastigote forms from culture showing morphological variation of forms observed (a); procyclic-like promastigote (b); leptomonad-like promastigote (c); nectomonad-like promastigote (d); and metacyclic-like promastigote (e). All images are at the same magnification. Scale-bar: 5 μm
Fig. 4Phylogenetic analysis of DNA sequences from LSCM4 and other members of the subgenus Leishmania (Mundinia). Each panel shows a maximum likelihood tree with all currently available sequence data from members of the subgenus, using L. infantum as an outgroup, and with numbers at nodes derived by bootstrapping at 1000 replicates. a ITS1. b RPL23a. c RNA PolII. d HSP70. For accession numbers see Additional file 2: Table S1. The CM4 clade is labelled L. orientalis
Comparisons of LSCM4 DNA sequences with those from PCM2 Trang [7]. The lengths of the sequences given are the number of nucleotides, the analysis excludes PCR primers and comparisons were made using Clustal Omega
| Sequence | Length LSCM4 | Length PCM2 | % identitya | No. of identical nt | No. of differences |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITS-1 | 251 | 251 | 96.4 | 242 | 9 |
| RPL23a IGS | 468 | 468 | 99.4 | 465 | 3 |
| RNAPolII | 1206 | 1206 | 100 | 1206 | 0 |
| HSP70 | 1319 | 1319 | 100 | 1319 | 0 |
a% identity = no. of identical nucleotides/longest length, where sequence length differs
Comparisons of LSCM4 DNA sequences with those from L. martiniquensis LSCM1 [6]. The lengths of the sequences given are the number of nucleotides, the analysis excludes PCR primers and comparisons were made using Clustal Omega
| Sequence | Length LSCM4 | Length LSCM1 | % identitya | No. of identical nt | No. of differences |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITS1 | 251 | 259 | 59.1 | 153 | 106 |
| RPL23a IGS | 468 | 472 | 64.8 | 306 | 166 |
| RNAPolII | 1206 | 1206 | 91.5 | 1104 | 102 |
| HSP70 | 1319 | 1319 | 95.7 | 1262 | 57 |
a% identity = no. of identical nucleotides/longest length, where sequence length differs
Reports of leishmaniasis from Thailand and Myanmar ordered by year of isolation. Where done, identification was performed by sequencing one or more DNA targets. Those identified witha were originally or subsequently reported as “L. siamensis” but later identified to be L. martiniquensis by Pothirat et al. [6]. Those identified withb were originally reported as “L. siamensis” but shown in this study to be very similar to L. orientalis
| Year | Location | Age | Sex | HIV | Primary clinical presentation | Species identification | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | Surat Thani, Thailand | 3 | Female | No | Visceral leishmaniasis | Unknown | Thisyakorn et al. (1999) [ |
| 2005 | Nan, Thailand | 40 | Male | No | Visceral leishmaniasis | Unknown | Kongkaew et al. (2007) [ |
| 2006 | Phang-Nga, Thailand | 55 | Male | No | Visceral leishmaniasis |
| Sukmee et al. (2008) [ |
| 2007 | Bangkok, Thailand | 66 | Male | No | Visceral leishmaniasis |
| Maharom et al. (2008) [ |
| 2009 | Chantaburi, Thailand | 37 | Male | Yes | Visceral leishmaniasis |
| Suankratay et al. (2010) [ |
| 2010 | Trang, Thailand | 35 | Female | Yes | Disseminated cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis |
| Bualert et al. (2012) [ |
| 2010 | Satun, Thailand | 7 | Female | No | Visceral leishmaniasis |
| Osatakul et al. (2014) [ |
| 2011 | Songkhla, Thailand | 46 | Male | Yes | Visceral and cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Chusri et al. (2012) [ |
| 2011 | Trang, Thailand | 30 | Male | Yes | Disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Chusri et al. (2012) [ |
| 2011 | Lop Buri, Thailand | 3 | Female | No | Cutaneous leishmaniasis | Unknown | Kattipathanapong et al. (2012) [ |
| 2012 | Yangon, Myanmar | 22 | Female | No | Asymptomatic |
| Phumee et al. (2013) [ |
| 2012 | Chiang Rai, Thailand | 45 | Male | Yes | Disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Phumee et al. (2013) [ |
| 2012 | Yangon, Myanmar | 34 | Male | Yes | Disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Phumee et al. (2013) [ |
| 2012 | Yangon, Myanmar | 60 | Male | No | Disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Noppakun et al. (2014) [ |
| 2012 | Ban Thi, Thailand | 52 | Male | No | Visceral leishmaniasis |
| Pothirat et al. (2014) [ |
| 2013 | Hang Dong, Thailand | 48 | Male | Yes | Disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Chiewchanvit et al. (2015) [ |
| 2013 | Mae Tha, Thailand | 38 | Male | Yes | Disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Chiewchanvit et al. (2015) [ |
| 2014 | Chiang Klang, Thailand | 57 | Female | No | Cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Present study |
| 2017 | Kanchanaburi, Thailand | 42 | Female | Yes | Disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis |
| Supsrisunjai et al. (2017) [ |