首页> 外文期刊>Infection, Genetics and Evolution: Journal of Molecular Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics in Infectious Diseases >Potential impacts of host specificity on zoonotic or interspecies transmission of Enterocytozoon bieneusi
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Potential impacts of host specificity on zoonotic or interspecies transmission of Enterocytozoon bieneusi

机译:宿主特异性对肠细胞毒性生物血清肠梗阻或梭菌传播的潜在影响

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摘要

Microsporidia are composed of a highly diverse group of single-celled, obligate intracellular fungi that colonize an extremely wide range of other eukaryotes, among which Enterocytozoon bieneusi is the most common species responsible for human microsporidiasis. Genotyping of E. bieneusi based on sequence analysis of the ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) has recognized similar to 500 genotypes in humans and a great variety of other mammals and birds. Those genotypes vary in genetic or hereditary characteristics and form 11 genetic groups in phylogenetic analysis of the ITS nucleotide sequences. Some of genotypes in Group 1 (e.g., D, EbpC, and type IV) and Group 2 (e.g., BEB4, BEB6, I, and J) have broad host and geographic ranges, constituting a major risk for zoonotic or cross-species transmission. By contrast, host specificity seems common in Group 3 to Group 11 whose members appear well adapted to specific hosts and thus would have minimal or unknown effects on public health. Multilocus sequence typing using the ITS, three microsatellites MS1, MS3, and MS7, and one minisatellite MS4, and population genetic analysis of Group 1 isolates reveal the occurrence of clonality, potential host adaptation, and population differentiation of E. bieneusi in various hosts. Nonetheless, it is still highly desirable to explore novel genetic markers with enough polymorphisms, to type complex or unstructured E. bieneusi populations of various host species and geographic origins, notably those belonging to Group 2 to Group 11. Additional population genetic and comparative genomic data are needed to elucidate the actual extent of host specificity in E. bieneusi and its potential impacts on zoonotic or interspecies transmission of microsporidiasis.
机译:Microscliaidia由高度多样化的单细胞组成,迫使细胞内真菌组成,所述细胞内真菌殖民化了极广泛的其他真核生物,其中肠细胞生物血清是最常见的人体孢子病负责的物种。基于核糖体内转录的间隔物(其)的序列分析的E. Bieneusi的基因分型已识别出类似于人类的500种基因型和各种其他哺乳动物和鸟类。这些基因型在遗传或遗传特征中变化,并在其核苷酸序列的系统发育分析中形成11种遗传基因。第1组(例如,D,EBPC和IV型)和第2组(例如,BEB4,BEB6,I和J)中的一些基因型具有广泛的主机和地理范围,构成了人畜共速测或跨物种传输的主要风险。相比之下,宿主特异性在第3组至第11组中似乎是常见的,其成员显得很好地适应特定主体,因此对公共卫生的影响很小或未知。使用其三种微卫星MS1,MS3和MS7和第1组分离物的群体遗传分析键入的多点序列序列揭示了各种宿主中B生物血症的克隆性,潜在宿主适应和人口分化的发生。尽管如此,仍然是探讨具有足够多态性的新型遗传标记,以型复杂或非结构化的E.的各种宿主物种和地理起源的生物血清群,特别是那些属于第2组至第11组的那些。另外的群体遗传和比较基因组数据需要阐明E.Bieneusi的宿主特异性的实际程度及其对杂苗病虫病的动物源的潜在影响。

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