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Lurking in the dark: Cryptic Strongyloides in a Bornean slow loris

机译:在黑暗中潜伏:婆罗洲慢猴中的隐性类圆线虫

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摘要

Within host communities, related species are more likely to share common parasitic agents, and as a result, morphological similarities have led researchers to conclude that parasites infecting closely related hosts within a community represent a single species. However, genetic diversity within parasite genera and host range remain poorly investigated in most systems. Strongyloides is a genus of soil-transmitted nematode that has been reported from several primate species in Africa and Asia, and has been estimated to infect hundreds of millions of people worldwide, although no precise estimates are available. Here we describe a case of infection with a cryptic species of Strongyloides in a Bornean (Philippine) slow loris (Nycticebus menagensis) living within a diverse community of several primate species in the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, Malaysian Borneo. Fresh fecal samples were collected from five primate species and nematode larvae cultured from these samples were selected for phylogenetic analyses. Sequences obtained for most larvae were identified as S. fuelleborni, grouping into three different clusters and showing no aggregation within specific hosts or geographic location. In contrast, a set of parasite sequences obtained from a slow loris clustered closely with S. stercoralis into a different group, being genetically distinct to sequences reported from other primate hosts, humans included. Our results suggest that although S. fuelleborni infects all haplorrhines sampled in this primate community, a different species might be infecting the slow loris, the only strepsirrhine in Borneo and one of the least studied primates in the region. Although more data are needed to support this conclusion, we propose that Strongyloides species in primates might be more diverse than previously thought, with potential implications for ecological and evolutionary host-parasite associations, as well as epidemiological dynamics.
机译:在寄主社区内,相关物种更有可能共享共同的寄生因子,因此,形态上的相似性已导致研究人员得出结论,感染社区内密切相关寄主的寄生虫代表单个物种。但是,在大多数系统中,寄生虫属和寄主范围内的遗传多样性仍缺乏研究。 Strongyloides是土壤传播的线虫的一种,据报道在非洲和亚洲有数种灵长类动物,尽管没有确切的估计,但据估计已感染全世界数亿人。在这里,我们描述了一个病例,该病例感染了婆罗洲(菲律宾)慢懒猴(Nycticebus menagensis)中的一种隐线菌属,该物种生活在马来西亚婆罗洲下京那巴当安野生动物保护区的几种灵长类动物的不同群落中。从五个灵长类动物中收集新鲜的粪便样品,并选择从这些样品中培养的线虫幼虫进行系统发育分析。获得的大多数幼虫序列被鉴定为S. fuelleborni,分为三个不同的簇,在特定宿主或地理位置内未显示出聚集。相比之下,从慢猴中获得的一组寄生虫序列与固醇链球菌紧密地聚集在一起,形成一个不同的群体,这与其他灵长类宿主(包括人类)报道的序列在遗传上是不同的。我们的结果表明,尽管S.fuelleborni感染了所有在该灵长类动物群落中采样的单倍体,但另一种物种可能正在感染慢速猴眼,这是婆罗洲唯一的链脲菌素,也是该地区研究最少的灵长类之一。尽管需要更多的数据来支持该结论,但我们认为灵长类中的强茎线虫物种可能比以前认为的更加多样化,对生态和进化宿主-寄生虫协会以及流行病学动态具有潜在的影响。

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