| Literature DB >> 36185031 |
Masoud Nazarizadeh1,2, Jiri Peterka3, Jan Kubecka3, Mojmir Vasek3, Tomas Juza3, Karlos Ribeiro de Moraes3, Martin Cech3, Michaela Holubova3, Allan T Souza3, Petr Blabolil2,3, Milan Muska3, Lobsang Tsering3, Daniel Barton3, Milan Riha3, Marek Smejkal3, Michal Tuser3, Lukas Vejrik3, Jaroslava Frouzova3, Ivan Jaric3, Marie Prchalova3, Ivana Vejrikova3, Jan Stefka1,2.
Abstract
Ligula intestinalis (Linnaeus, 1758) is a tapeworm parasite with a worldwide distribution that uses a wide variety of fish species as its second intermediate host. In the present study, we investigated the prevalence and population genetic structure of plerocercoids of L. intestinalis in five common cyprinoid species, roach Rutilus rutilus (Linnaeus), freshwater bream Abramis brama (Linnaeus), white bream Blicca bjoerkna (Linnaeus), bleak Alburnus alburnus (Linnaeus), and rudd Scardinius erythrophthalmus (Linnaeus), collected in six water bodies of the Czech Republic (Milada, Most, Medard, Jordán, Římov and Lipno). Of the six study sites, the highest frequency of parasitism was recorded in Lake Medard (15%). The overall prevalence rate among the species was as follows: roach > rudd ≥ freshwater bream > bleak > white bream. Two mitochondrial genes (cytb and COI) were used to compare the population genetic structure of parasite populations using selected samples from the five fish species. The results of the phylogenetic analysis indicated that all populations of L. intestinalis were placed in Clade A, previously identified as the most common in Europe. At a finer scale, haplotype network and PCoA analyses indicated the possible emergence of host specificity of several mtDNA haplotypes to the freshwater bream. Moreover, pairwise Fixation indices (FST) revealed a significant genetic structure between the parasite population in freshwater bream and other host species. Parasite populations in roach not only showed the highest rate of prevalence but also depicted a maximum number of shared haplotypes with populations from bleak and rudd. Our results suggest that recent ecological differentiation might have influenced tapeworm populations at a fine evolutionary scale. Thus, the differences in prevalence between fish host species in different lakes might be influenced not only by the parasite's ecology, but also by its genetic diversity.Entities:
Keywords: Czech Republic; fish parasite; freshwater; host specificity; tapeworm
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36185031 DOI: 10.14411/fp.2022.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Folia Parasitol (Praha) ISSN: 0015-5683 Impact factor: 1.614