Abstract

Causal agents of schistosomiasis are dioecious, digenean schistosomes affecting mankind in 76 countries. Preventive measures are manifold but need to be complemented by vaccination for long-term protection; vaccine candidates in advanced pre-clinical/clinical stages include Sm14, Sm-TSP-2/Sm-TSP-2Al®, Smp80/SchistoShield®, and Sh28GST/Bilhvax®. Natural and anthropogenic changes impact on breaking species isolation barriers favoring introgressive hybridization, i.e., allelic exchange among gene pools of sympatric, interbreeding species leading to instant large genetic diversity. Phylogenetic distance matters, thus the less species differ phylogenetically the more likely they hybridize. PubMed and Embase databases were searched for publications limited to hybridale confirmation by mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COX) and/or nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS). Human schistosomal hybrids are predominantly reported from West Africa with clustering in the Senegal River Basin, and scattering to Europe, Central and Eastern Africa. Noteworthy is the dominance of Schistosoma haematobium interbreeding with human and veterinary species leading due to hybrid vigor to extinction and homogenization as seen for S. guineensis in Cameroon and S. haematobium in Niger, respectively. Heterosis seems to advantage S. haematobium/S. bovis interbreeds with dominant S. haematobium-ITS/S. bovis-COX1 profile to spread from West to East Africa and reoccur in France. S. haematobium/S. mansoni interactions seen among Senegalese and Côte d’Ivoirian children are unexpected due to their high phylogenetic distance. Detecting pure S. bovis and S. bovis/S. curassoni crosses capable of infecting humans observed in Corsica and Côte d’Ivoire, and Niger, respectively, is worrisome. Taken together, species hybridization urges control and preventive measures targeting human and veterinary sectors in line with the One-Health concept to be complemented by vaccination protecting against transmission, infection, and disease recurrence. Functional and structural diversity of naturally occurring human schistosomal hybrids may impact current vaccine candidates requiring further research including natural history studies in endemic areas targeted for clinical trials.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in Division of Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, 80539 Munich, Germany

  • Investigations on miracidia hatched from urinary and fecal ova of Senegalese schoolchildren from six villages in the Senegal River Basin (SRB) adjunct to Senegal River, Lampsar River, and Lac de Guier revealed 15% ShxSb isolates with S. haematobium (Sh)-ITSxSb-c oxidase subunit 1 (COX1) profiles producing viable offspring; patterns were confirmed by double chromatographic peaks at polymorphic positions of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and sequence divergence of COX1 with alignment to Sh and S. bovis (Sb) strains from Guede Chantier and St

  • Schistosomal hybrids are predominantly reported from West Africa with scattering to Europe, Central and Eastern Africa

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Summary

Disease and Transmission

The parasite species-specific snail-to-vertebrate transmission is mediated by skinpenetrating cercariae during contact with infested freshwater that transform into schistosomulae and migrate matured to adult worms to their oviposition sites within the vascular system for mating. Schistosomes are monogamous, one female is fitted per male gynaecophoric canal, though mate changes are reported allowing homo- and/or hetero-specific inter- and/or intra-species worm crossing in the hepatic portal system [9,10]; ova produced are released via feces or urine to continue the vertebrate-to-snail transmission for asexual reproduction upon miracidia hatching into freshwater, or retained in tissues causing parasite speciesdependent inflammatory pathologies due to granulomatous-fibrotic formations [3,11,12,13].

Treatment and Prevention
Instant Gene Exchange
Schistosome Hybrids across Africa—The Tip of the Iceberg
Schistosomal Hybridization—Interference on Leading Vaccine Candidates
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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