| Literature DB >> 33905888 |
Mughees Aizaz Alvi1, Li Li1, John Asekhaen Ohiolei1, Warda Qamar2, Muhammad Saqib3, Muhammad Haleem Tayyab3, Javaria Altaf4, Khurram Ashfaq3, Ali Hassan3, Muhammad Jamal5, Abdul Wahab5, Anum Aizaz Alvi6, Muhammad Usman3, Muhammad Rashid Khalid Bajwa3, Bao-Quan Fu7, Hong-Bin Yan8, Wan-Zhong Jia9.
Abstract
Hydatigera taeniaeformis formerly referred to as Taenia taeniaeformis is a cestode of cats (definitive hosts) and rodents (intermediate hosts). The prevalence of the metacestode larval stage has been reported in rodents in many parts of the world even though the genetic polymorphisms or intraspecies variation is still understudied. Here, we report a prevalence of 22.09% (38/172) from an urban rodent population in Pakistan and a nucleotide diversity (cox1) of 0.00463 among the population. Infection was higher in male (27.85%) and adult (32.29%) rats than female and sub-adult/young rats. Interestingly, The median-joining network and phylogenetic construction comprising isolates from China, Japan, Kenya, Laos, Malaysia, Senegal, the United Arab Emirates, and countries in Europe demonstrated that Pakistani H. taeniaeformis are closer to Asian and African population than those of European origin. The results of the study will add-in preliminary data for H. taeniaeformis and will also contribute to understand the global molecular epidemiology and population structure of H. taeniaeformis.Entities:
Keywords: Genetic diversity; Hydatigera taeniaeformis; Pakistan; Rats; cox1
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33905888 DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2021.104873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Genet Evol ISSN: 1567-1348 Impact factor: 3.342