| Literature DB >> 34294132 |
Alicia Rojas1, Arnaldo Maldonado-Junior2, Javier Mora3, Alessandra Morassutti4, Rubens Rodriguez4, Alberto Solano-Barquero3, Anamariela Tijerino5, Marianela Vargas5, Carlos Graeff-Teixeira6.
Abstract
Angiostrongylus costaricensis is a zoonotic parasitic nematode described for the first time in 1971 by Pedro Morera and Rodolfo Céspedes in Costa Rica. This parasite causes an infection known as abdominal angiostrongyliasis, affecting mainly school-aged children and young adults. Infection with A. costaricensis has been associated with a myriad of rodent and mollusk species in the Americas and the Caribbean, as its natural hosts and reservoirs. In this commemorative review, we highlight the extensive research collected through a 50-year journey, which includes ecological, pathological, and molecular studies on A. costaricensis and its implicated disease. We also identify major knowledge gaps in its evolutionary history, the ecological role of imported and invasive mollusk species, and immune response. We propose that the advent of -omics analyses will allow us to gather novel information regarding A. costaricensis biology and infection dynamics, as well as to promote the design of much-needed sensitive and specific diagnostic tools.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal angiostrongyliasis; Angiostrongylus costaricensis; Eosinophilic enteritis; Helminthiasis; Zoonosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34294132 PMCID: PMC8296644 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-021-04875-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Pedro Morera, Emeritus Professor at the University of Costa Rica and Past President of the World Federation of Parasitologists. Together with Marta Conejo-Víquez and Arnoldo Castro-Araya, were pioneers in the study of the Angiostrongylus costaricensis life cycle, pathology, and ecology. Photo credit: Marcia Krauze Diehl. This photo is licensed under the Creative Commons CC BY license
Fig. 2Geographical distribution of Angiostrongylus costaricensis in the Americas. This parasite has been detected in North and Central America in the USA (Los Angeles, Miami, Texas) [11, 53], Mexico (not specified in which location) [13], Guatemala (Chiquimula, Ciudad de Guatemala, El Progreso, Guastatoya, Jalapa, Jutiapa, Suchitepequez) [41], Honduras (Comayagua, Cortés, El Paraíso, Francisco Morazán, Olancho) [45], El Salvador (not specified), Nicaragua (León) [17, 62], Costa Rica (Alajuela, Cartago, Guanacaste, Heredia, Limón, Puntarenas, San José) [37], and Panama (not specified) [18]. In South America, A. costaricensis has been reported in Colombia (Caquetá, Huila, Putumayo, Tolima, Valle, Vaupés) [19], Venezuela (not specified) [20], Ecuador (Guayaquil) [22], Perú (Iquitos) [21], Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina, Parana, São Paulo, Brasília, Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo) [68, 86], and Argentina (Misiones, Tucumán) [24]. Angiostrongylus costaricensis has been found in several geographical locations in the Caribbean, including Cuba [25], Guadeloupe [29], Haiti [28], Martinique [27], and the Dominican Republic [26]. Finally, rare cases have been detected in Spain [35] and Zaire [32]. This figure was created using mapchart.net
Fig. 3Migratory courses of Angiostrongylus costaricensis L3 larvae in experimental infection of cotton rats Sigmodon hispidus. a The lymphatic–venous–arterial pathway that leads to the development of adult worms in mesenteric or ileocolic arteries and excretion of L1 larvae in the rat’s feces. b Depicts the venous course, which is less common, and adult stages are found in hepatic veins. In this pathway, L1 larvae are not shed in feces. This figure was created using BioRender.com
Vertebrate species reported as Angiostrongylus costaricensis-competent hosts based on morphological or molecular identification of the parasite
| Vertebrate host | Order and family of host | Country | Diagnostic method | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rodentia, Cricetidae | Costa Rica, Honduras, El Salvador, Panama, Brazil, USA | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Rodentia, Muridae | Costa Rica, Panama, Guadeloupe | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Rodentia, Muridae | Guadeloupe | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Rodentia, Cricetidae | Honduras | NI | [ | |
| Rodentia, Heteromyidae | Panama | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Rodentia, Cricetidae | Panama, Brazil | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Rodentia, Cricetidae | Brazil | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Rodentia, Cricetidae | Brazil | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Rodentia, Cricetidae | Argentina | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Rodentia, Cricetidae | Panama | NI | [ | |
| Rodentia, Cricetidae | Colombia | Morphological identification of L1 in rodent feces | [ | |
| Carnivora, Procyonidae | USA | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Primates, Hylobatidae | USA | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Primates, Aotidae | USA | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Primates, Callitrichidae | Peru | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Primates, Callitrichidae | Brazil | Histopathological examination | [ | |
| Didelphimorphia, Didelphidae | USA | Morphological identification | [ | |
| Carnivora, Procyonidae | Costa Rica | Histopathological examination and molecular analysis | [ | |
| Carnivora, Canidae | Costa Rica | Histopathological examination and molecular analysis | [ |
NI, not indicated in the source
aThese animals were kept in captivity
bThe specimens collected from this work were later identified as Angiostrongylus minascensis
Mollusk species reported as Angiostrongylus costaricensis competent hosts based on morphological identification of the parasite
| Host species | Family | Host type | Geographical location | Percentage of maximum prevalence reported in naturally infected samples (total sample) | Maximum parasitic L3 load reported in naturally infected samples | Type of infection reported in mollusks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Veronicellidae | Land slug | Brazil | 33.3 (24) | 13 | Natural | [ | |
| Planorbidae | Aquatic snail | Brazil | NNI | NNI | Experimental | [ | |
| Planorbidae | Aquatic snail | Brazil | NNI | NNI | Experimental | [ | |
| Planorbidae | Aquatic snail | Brazil | NNI | NNI | Experimental | [ | |
| Bradybaenidae | Land snail | Brazil | 93.4 (91) | 98 | Natural | [ | |
| Helicidae | Land snail | Brazil | 4.7 (63) | ID | Natural | [ | |
| Limacidae | Land slug | Brazil | 0.1 (9) | 1 | Natural | [ | |
| Limacidae | Land slug | Brazil | 17 (12) | ID | Natural | [ | |
| Limacidae | Land slug | Brazil | 28 (143) | ID | Natural | [ | |
| Megalobulimidae | Land snail | Brazil | ID | ID | Natural | [ | |
| Philomycidae | Land slug | Brazil | 4.5 (245) | 8 | Natural | [ | |
| Succineidae | Semiaquatic slug | Brazil | NNI | NNI | Experimental | [ | |
| Veronicellidae | Land slug | Brazil | NNI | NNI | Experimental | [ | |
| Veronicellidae | Land slug | Brazil | 16.6 (6) | 1 | Natural | [ | |
| Veronicellidae | Land slug | Brazil | 28 (100) | 75 | Natural | [ | |
| Veronicellidae | Land slug | Brazil | 86 (50) | 7720 | Natural | [ | |
| Veronicellidae | Land slug | Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Ecuador | 69.3 (856) | 4600 | Natural | [ | |
| Veronicellidae | Land slug | Colombia | NNI | NNI | Experimental | [ |
NNI, no natural infection reported
ID, insufficient data
aNative species
bIntroduced species
Fig. 4Proposed model of Angiostrongylus costaricensis–intermediate host interactions. These events are based on Sarasinula linguaeformis (syn. S. marginata) and Omalonyx spp. experimental infections [9, 72, 74–76]. a L1 larvae can infect mollusks using two main pathways: transdermal or oral infection. In the first, L1 larvae penetrate the mollusk’s tegument through the mucous gland pores and ducts. Then, larvae reach fibromuscular tissues by direct migration or embolization in hemolymph vessels to the kidney and other viscera. Molting to L2 stage occurs after 4 days of infection. During oral infection, L1 larvae reach fibromuscular tissues by penetrating the oral, intestinal, or rectal mucosa (1), through the kidneys (2), or through the hemolymph vessels (3). Only L1 larvae located in fibromuscular tissues molt until L3 stage. b After L1 larvae penetrate mollusk tissues and reach hemolymph vessels, either by oral or transdermal routes, poor perilarval granulomatous reactions with amebocytes are started after two to six hours post-infection. L1 to L2 transitioning is a strong cellular stimulus for amebocyte proliferation in the hemolymph. As the cellular response progresses, it is possible to observe different degrees of granulomas around the L2s, some of which become epithelioid cells. Some granulomas containing L2 larvae or in L2–L3 transition larvae will be located on the wall of vessels adjacent to different fibromuscular tissues, especially those anatomical regions juxtaposed with the acinus and ducts of the mucous glands of the tegument. In these cases, granulomatous reactions will degenerate hemolymph vessels and glandular tissues, giving the already mature and mobile L3 larvae access to glandular ducts in order to be shed in the mollusk’s mucous secretions. This figure was created using BioRender.com
Fig. 5Histopathology findings during Angiostrongylus costaricensis infection in humans. a Segmental lesion in the small bowel with granulation in the serosal surface. b Intense and diffuse eosinophilic infiltration in gut mucosa (magnification: ×400). c Eosinophilic arteritis (magnification: ×100). d Granulomatous reaction engulfing egg in capillary lumen (magnification: ×400). e Adult worms inside arterial lumen (magnification: ×100)