Abstract

Taenia saginata is a globally distributed tapeworm responsible for human taeniasis due to the ingestion of raw or undercooked beef. T. saginata is present in several Asian countries, including China, Thailand, Lao PDR, Cambodia, and Vietnam, but little is known about its genetic variation. Studying the tapeworm’s phylogeographic patterns is crucial to better understanding their association with the geographic distribution of taeniasis/cysticercosis in human populations. In the present study, 38 specimens of this putative species were collected in central regions of Vietnam and analysed using the mitochondrial gene Cytochrome c Oxidase subunit I (COI) as a molecular marker to assess the correct species identification and investigate the level of genetic variation at different geographic scales. Phylogenetic and phylogeographic analyses were carried out on a dataset that included COI sequences from Vietnamese specimens and from all conspecifics available in GenBank to date. The results showed that the collected Vietnamese specimens belonged to the species T. saginata. In Southeast Asia, signs of a possible founder effect were discovered, with the most common haplotypes frequent and present in many countries, except Lao PDR, which shares its most common haplotype only with individuals from Thailand. Remarkably, a unique taxonomic entity was found worldwide, even though the available COI sequences of T. saginata belonging to non-Asiatic countries are, at present, limited. Therefore, future studies including more COI sequences from a higher number of countries and the use of a combined molecular approach with multiple genetic markers would be useful to provide deeper insight into the global genetic variation of this species.

Highlights

  • Human taeniasis is a parasitic zoonosis caused by infection of helminth agents belonging to the genus Taenia (Linneus 1758) (Cyclophyllidea, Taeniidae)

  • We identified tapeworm specimens based on the Cytochrome c Oxidase subunit I (COI) gene sequence, which is used as a common marker to infer phylogenetic relationships among cestode species [4,5]

  • All the sequences obtained from the Vietnamese specimens showed a 100% of genetic identity match with the species T. saginata with the Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST) analysis implemented in the GenBank nucleotide database

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Human taeniasis is a parasitic zoonosis caused by infection of helminth agents belonging to the genus Taenia (Linneus 1758) (Cyclophyllidea, Taeniidae). T. saginata, T. solium, and T. asiatica are unique among tapeworms for their life cycle since humans act as their only definitive host. Faeces, containing helminth eggs, are released into the environment by definitive hosts (carnivorous or omnivorous predators) and ingested by intermediate hosts (herbivorous prey) which become infected. When a predator ingests infected meat, the tapeworm completes its life cycle in the intestinal tract of the host and produces egg-filled proglottids, which are released into the environment inside faeces [5,7], where they can be viable for several weeks or even months [2,8]. The eggs released contain oncospheres (a larval form of Taenia) which passively infect intermediate hosts when ingested, migrating from the small intestine to skeletal muscle and developing into cysticerci (an intermediate stage that evolves into adult tapeworms inside the human intestinal tract) [2,3,9]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call