| Literature DB >> 33853647 |
Gereon Schares1, Maike Joeres2, Franziska Rachel2, Mareen Tuschy2, Gábor Á Czirják3, Pavlo Maksimov2, Franz J Conraths2, Bettina Wachter4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Besnoitia darlingi, B. neotomofelis and B. oryctofelisi are closely related coccidian parasites with felids as definitive hosts. These parasites use a variety of animal species as intermediate hosts. North American opossums (Didelphis virginiana), North American southern plains woodrats (Neotoma micropus) and South American domestic rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) are intermediate hosts of B. darlingi, B. neotomofelis and B. oryctofelisi, respectively. Based on conserved regions in the internal transcribed spacer-1 (ITS1) sequence of the ribosomal DNA (rDNA), a real-time PCR for a sensitive detection of these Besnoitia spp. in tissues of intermediate hosts and faeces of definitive hosts has recently been established. Available sequence data suggest that species such as B. akodoni and B. jellisoni are also covered by this real-time PCR. It has been hypothesised that additional Besnoitia spp. exist worldwide that are closely related to B. darlingi or B. darlingi-like parasites (B. neotomofelis, B. oryctofelisi, B. akodoni or B. jellisoni). Also related, but not as closely, is B. besnoiti, the cause of bovine besnoitiosis.Entities:
Keywords: Acinonyx jubatus; Besnoitia spp.; Eutheria; Marsupial mammals; Metatheria; Namibia; Phylogeny; Placental mammals; Real-time PCR
Year: 2021 PMID: 33853647 PMCID: PMC8048190 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-021-04697-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Overview of PCR fragments and primer names used to assess rDNA sequences of Besnoitia darlingi-like parasites (named “Besnoitia-acinonyx” for this study) and related organisms in faeces of a Namibian cheetah. Green-coloured amplicons revealed sequences closely related to B. darlingi-like parasites (Table 1); yellow-coloured amplicons revealed sequences related to additional coccidia (Table 1). Details on primer sequences are given in Additional file 1: Table S1. ITS1 Internal transcribed spacer-1
The PCR analyses targeted nine overlapping regions of the 18S rDNA, internal transcribed spacer-1 rDNA and part of the 5.8S rDNA
| Relatedness of sequences | Amplification with primer pairs | Number of clones | Top five species with highest identity and coverage in GenBank (number of sequences per organism, percent coverage, percent identity) |
|---|---|---|---|
| BbGS4F–BdanjoRev | 3 | ||
| JS4–TIM11 | 3 | ||
| 18S-5F–TIM11 | 3 | ||
| JS4–TIM11 | 2 | ||
| JS4–TIM11 | 1 | ||
| BbGS5F–BbGS5R | 2 | ||
| Coccidia-related | BbGS1F–BbGS1R | 6 | |
| BbGS4F–BbGS4R | 2 | ||
| BbGS6F–BbGS6R | 2 | ||
| BbGS2F–BbGS2R | 1 | ||
| BbGS3F–BbGS3R | 1 | ||
| BbGS3F–BbGS3R | 1 | ||
| Unrelated to coccidia | BbGS6F–BbGS6R | 1 | |
| BbGS6F–BbGS6R | 1 | ||
| BbGS4F–BbGS4R | 1 | ||
| BbGS4F–BbGS4R | 1 |
A variable number of plasmid clones per target was received and subsequently Sanger-sequenced. Sequences were not concatenated, but individually assessed by BLASTn. The top five hits of species using in BLASTn the option MaxScore are displayed. Due to the conserved primer regions, sequences of unrelated species, i.e. predominantly fungi, were identified in addition to sequences resembling sequences of coccidian parasite-related or Besnoitia sp.-related species
Fig. 2GenBank sequences of Neospora caninum (Ncan; AY259040), Toxoplasma gondii (Tgond; ME49, L49390), Hammondia heydorni (Hheyd; AY189897), Hammondia triffitae (Htriff; KJ396594), Besnoitia besnoiti (Bbesn, AY833646), “Besnoitia-acinonyx” (MW468050; this study; Additional file 2: Text S1), B. jellisoni (Bjel; AF076860), B. neotomofelis (Bneot; HQ909085), B. akodoni (Bakod; AY545987), B. oryctofelisi #1 (Boryct1; AY182000), B. oryctofelisi #2 (Boryct2; GU479632), B. darlingi #1 (Bdar1; AF489696), B. darlingi #2 (Bdar2; MF872605), B. darlingi #3 (Bdar3; GU479631) and B. darlingi #4 (Bdar4, HQ163919) were subjected to evolutionary history analysis using the maximum parsimony (MP) method. The consensus tree inferred from the 6 most parsimonious trees is shown. Branches corresponding to partitions reproduced in < 50% trees are collapsed. The consistency index is 0.912 (0.866), the retention index is 0.910 (0.910), and the composite index is 0.830 (0.788) for all sites and parsimony-informative sites (in parentheses). The MP tree was obtained using the subtree-pruning-regrafting algorithm [35] with search level 0, in which the initial trees were obtained by the random addition of sequences (10 replicates). The tree is drawn to scale, with branch lengths calculated using the average pathway method [35] and are in the units of the number of changes over the whole sequence. The analysis involved 15 nucleotide sequences. All codon positions (1st, 2nd, 3rd, noncoding) were included. There were 425 positions in the final dataset. Evolutionary analyses were conducted in MEGA X [36]
Estimates of evolutionary divergence between the internal transcribed spacer-1 rDNA region sequences of “Besnoitia-acinonyx” (MW468050; this study) and other Besnoitia spp. [B. besnoiti (AY833646), B. jellisoni (AF076860), B. neotomofelis (HQ909085), B. akodoni (AY545987), B. oryctofelisi (AY182000, GU479632), B. darlingi (AF489696, MF872605, GU479631, HQ163919], Toxoplasma gondii (L49390), Neospora caninum (AY259040), Hammondia heydorni (AY189897) and H. triffitae (KJ396594)
| Isolate | Besnoitia-acinonyx | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Besnoitia- acinonyx | |||||||||||
| 0.257 | |||||||||||
| 0.288 | 0.269 | ||||||||||
| 0.297 | 0.268 | 0.011 | |||||||||
| 0.234 | 0.492 | ||||||||||
| 0.279 | |||||||||||
| 0.288 | |||||||||||
| 0.294 | |||||||||||
| 0.268 | |||||||||||
| 0.271 (0.277) |
The number of base substitutions per site between sequences are shown in the table (pairwise distance). Analyses were conducted using the maximum composite likelihood model [37]. This analysis involved 15 nucleotide sequences. All codon positions (1st, 2nd, 3rd, Noncoding) were included. All ambiguous positions were removed for each sequence pair (pairwise deletion option). There were 425 positions in the final dataset. Evolutionary analyses were conducted in MEGA X [36]
Pairwise distances > 0.5 are underlined. Distances < 0.1 are given in italics
aThe two sequences of B. oryctofelisi revealed the same values for all cells
bThree of the four sequences of B. darlingi revealed the same values for all cells; the fourth sequence of B. darlingi (MF872605) revealed slightly different values which are shown in parenthesis