Abstract

Centrocestus formosanus is a foodborne intestinal trematode that is native to Asia and has been introduced into the Americas and Europe. Although there are several studies of C. formosanus in definitive vertebrate hosts (birds and mammals, including humans), and in intermediate vertebrate hosts (fish and amphibians), there is little published information regarding interaction with its transmitting mollusc. In this study we studied the miracidial development of C. formosanus using a mouse as a source of eggs. Adult parasites were maintained in water in order to develop miracidia in intrauterine eggs. Miracidia appeared at 12 days of incubation, with no hatching observed for up to 40 days. Subsequently, we placed dead C. formosanus containing eggs with miracidia individually in contact with 48 specimens of Melanoides tuberculata, and observed the absence of the parasites after 1h of exposure, suggesting that they were ingested by the snails. Of the 33 experimentally-infected snails that were alive after 84–89 days post-infection (DPI), seven (21%) shed cercariae. We detected young C. formosanus rediae in 21/33 (64%) M. tuberculata at 90 DPI. To our knowledge, this report is the first to show that, in the life cycle of C. formosanus, infection of molluscs occurs passively by ingestion of eggs, followed by a long intramolluscan phase. We compare these data with those described for other Heterophyidae, and discuss on the phylogenetic background of the pattern of miracidial development verified in these parasites.

Highlights

  • Centrocestus formosanus (Nishigori, 1924) is an intestinal foodborne trematode that parasitizes birds and mammals, including humans

  • The following morphological features observed in the material examined for this study were in accordance with previous descriptions of the developmental stages of C. formosanus: cercariae characterized as pleurolophocercous type; oval-shaped metacercariae presenting an X-shaped excretory vesicle with dark granules inside; small adults with a double crown of 32 circumoral spines, entire ovary, two opposite posterior testes, follicular vitellaria extending laterally along the body and few eggs in the uterus [2, 4, 6, 9, 10, 27, 28]

  • Various aspects of its life cycle were described by Nishigori as follows: (1) molluscs of the family Thiaridae are the first intermediate hosts; (2) pleurolophocercous cercariae emerge from the snails; (3) fish are second intermediate hosts, (4) birds and mammals, including humans (Nishigori infected himself) are the definitive hosts; (5) unembryonated eggs develop in the environment, forming miracidia, which hatch and develop directly to rediae after actively infecting the mollusc

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Summary

Introduction

Centrocestus formosanus (Nishigori, 1924) is an intestinal foodborne trematode that parasitizes birds and mammals, including humans. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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