Abstract

The most frequent causative agent of diphyllobothriosis, a fish-borne parasitic zoonosis, is the broad fish tapeworm Dibothriocephalus latus distributed mainly throughout the Holarctic region. The larval stages of the tapeworm were also detected in native and introduced freshwater fish in several lakes in South America, particularly in the north-western Patagonia in Argentina. The main objective of the present study was to determine the genetic structure of D. latus from rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), brown trout (Salmo trutta), and brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) from Gutiérrez Lake and Alicura Reservoir in Argentina using the sequences of three mitochondrial genes (cox1, cob, and nad3) and six polymorphic microsatellite loci. The results were compared with the corresponding molecular data of D. latus from Europe (Switzerland and Italy; the Alpine lakes region) and Asia (Siberia, Russia). Only one concatenated haplotype identical with the con-Ha1 specific for D. latus from the Alpine lakes region was detected in all individuals from Argentina. Three different alleles were detected in five out of six analysed microsatellite loci, indicating the presence of three sets of chromosomes. The same structure of microsatellite loci was recently observed in D. latus from Switzerland and Italy, in which triploidy was previously confirmed by cytogenetic study. The data on the mitochondrial genes, the allelic structure of microsatellite loci, and the principal coordinate analysis showed close genetic relationships between D. latus from Argentina and the Alpine lakes region, thus supporting the hypothesis of the European origin of the broad fish tapeworm from South America.

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