| Literature DB >> 32690109 |
Meng-Jie Gu1, Yan-Wei Li1,2, Aidan M Emery3, Shi-Zhu Li4, Yong-Zhong Jiang2, Hui-Fen Dong1, Qin-Ping Zhao5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schistosoma japonicum is a waterborne parasite that causes schistosomiasis in humans and in more than 40 animal species. Schistosoma japonicum shows distinct genetic differentiation among geographical populations and multiple hosts, but the genetic diversity of different developmental stages of S. japonicum from is less studied. Such studies could elucidate ecological mechanisms in disease transmission by analysing feedbacks in individual physiology and population state.Entities:
Keywords: Adult worm; Cercaria; Distribution; Genetic variation; Miracidium; Pairing; Schistosoma japonicum
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32690109 PMCID: PMC7372819 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-020-04240-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Flowchart of sample collection and experimental design
Fig. 2Frequency distribution of kinship coefficients for cercariae inter- and intra-snails. Box plot of pairwise I’ estimated with niMLGs-filtered data of cercariae inter- and intra-snails of two groups. Minimum and maximum are marked with “-”, the “×” means 99% values included, and the arithmetic mean is represented by a square
Fig. 3The number of snails sampled affects the coverage of alleles of cercariae. Nine curves represent Na of cercariae on 9 loci separately in snails of Group A or B, which increased with more snails involved. Standard deviation of Na among replicates for each locus progressively decreased with the number of snails increasing. The blue horizontal line in the inset shows 50% of total Na, and the red line shows 95% of total Na for all 9 loci. Standard deviation of Na among replicates decreases with increasing number of snails
Fig. 4Genetic distance between paired and unpaired worms. Spot plot of genetic distance between each pair of paired worms, between unpaired females (if available) and paired male, and between paired female and unpaired males (if available) in 36 mice which have unpaired worms, marked by green, red, and blue circles separately. Black dots represent the average mean of genetic distance, and error bars are displayed as coloured bars
Paternity identification for miracidia
| Group | Offspring ID | Mother ID | Father ID |
|---|---|---|---|
| Method I | |||
| M3-L-7 | M3-f1 | M3-m1 | |
| M24-S-7 | M24-f5 | M24-m5 | |
| M28-L-7 | M28-f2 | M28-m2 | |
| Method II | M1-S-6 | M1-f5 | M1-m5 |
| M1-S-7 | M1-f1 | M1-m1 | |
| M2-S-7 | M2-f3 | M2-m3 | |
| M2-S-8 | M2-f3 | M2-m3 | |
| M3-S-7 | M3-f1 | M3-m1 | |
| M3-L-5 | M3-f8 | M3-m8 | |
| M8-L-7 | M8-f1 | M8-m1 | |
| M9-L-8 | M9-f1 | M9-m1 | |
| M11-L-5 | M11-f7 | M11-m7 | |
| M13-L-5 | M13-f3 | M13-m3 | |
| M17-S-8 | M17-f5 | M17-m5 | |
| M18-S-5 | M18-f1 | M18-m1 | |
| M19-S-8 | M19-f5 | M19-m5 | |
| M19-S-8 | M19-f6a | M19-m6 | |
| M20-L-5 | M20-f5 | M20-M5 | |
| M21-L-6 | M21-f2 | M21-m2 | |
| M22-S-8 | M22-f5 | M22-m5 |
aIndicates there are multiple potential candidates with same LOD
Notes: Offspring ID is the identity of miracidium, which is composed of host number, origin organ of sampling, and miracidium number. M, S, and L represent mouse, stool, and liver, respectively. For example, M2-S-8, represents the 8th miracidium that was hatched out from a stool (S) of the 2nd mouse (M2). Mother or father ID assigned is the identity of the adult worm that assigned to be the mother or father of the corresponding miracidium (offspring), includes host number, the sex of the worm, and worm number, f and m represent the female and male, respectively. Single means the worm was not in a pair when collected. M2-f1 means the female one of the 1st worm pair in the 2nd mouse. The parents of miracidia which were not paired with each other at the time of collection are in bold