Prevalence and molecular characterization of Entamoeba moshkovskii in diarrheal patients from Eastern India
-
Published:2023-05-11
Issue:5
Volume:17
Page:e0011287
-
ISSN:1935-2735
-
Container-title:PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:PLoS Negl Trop Dis
Author:
Sardar Sanjib K.,Ghosal Ajanta,Haldar Tapas,Maruf Maimoon,Das Koushik,Saito-Nakano Yumiko,Kobayashi Seiki,Dutta Shanta,Nozaki Tomoyoshi,Ganguly Sandipan
Abstract
Background
Importance of the amphizoic amoeba Entamoeba moshkovskii is increasing in the study of amoebiasis as a common human pathogen in some settings. Limited studies are found on the genetic and phylogenetic characterization of E. moshkovskii from India; hence remain largely unknown. In this study, we determined the prevalence and characterized the E. moshkovskii isolates in eastern India.
Methods
A three-year systemic surveillance study among a total of 6051 diarrhoeal patients from ID Hospital and BC Roy Hospital, Kolkata was conducted for E. moshkovskii detection via a nested PCR system targeting 18S rRNA locus. The outer primer set detected the genus Entamoeba and the inner primer pair identified the E. moshkovskii species. The 18S rRNA locus of the positive samples was sequenced. Genetic and phylogenetic structures were determined using DnaSP.v5 and MEGA-X. GraphPad Prism (v.8.4.2), CA, USA was used to analyze the statistical data.
Result
4.84% (95%CI = 0.0433–0.0541) samples were positive for Entamoeba spp and 3.12% (95%CI = 0.027–0.036) were infected with E. moshkovskii. E. moshkovskii infection was significantly associated with age groups (X2 = 26.01, P<0.0001) but not with gender (Fisher’s exact test = 0.2548, P<0.05). A unique seasonal pattern was found for E. moshkovskii infection. Additionally, 46.56% (95%CI = 0.396–0.537) were sole E. moshkovskii infections and significantly associated with diarrheal incidence (X2 = 335.5,df = 9; P<0.0001). Sequencing revealed that the local E. moshkovskii strains were 99.59%-100% identical to the prototype (GenBank: KP722605.1). The study found certain SNPs that showed a correlation with clinical features, but it is not necessarily indicative of direct control over pathogenicity. However, SNPs in the 18S rRNA gene could impact the biology of the amoeba and serve as a useful phylogenetic marker for identifying pathogenic E. moshkovskii isolates. Neutrality tests of different coinfected subgroups indicated deviations from neutrality and implied population expansion after a bottleneck event or a selective sweep and/or purifying selection in co-infected subgroups. The majority of FST values of different coinfected subgroups were <0.25, indicating low to moderate genetic differentiation within the subgroups of this geographical area.
Conclusion
The findings reveal the epidemiological significance of E. moshkovskii infection in Eastern India as the first report in this geographical area and expose this species as a possible emerging enteric pathogen in India. Our findings provide useful knowledge for further research and the development of future control strategies against E. moshkovskii.
Funder
National Institute of Infectious Diseases
Indian Council of Medical Research
Government of India
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference56 articles.
1. World Health Organization/Pan American Health Organization/UNESCO report of a consultation of experts on amoebiasis.;Mexico City, Mexico 28–29,1997
2. Laboratory diagnosis of amebiasis;M Tanyuksel;Clin Microbiol Rev,2003
3. Laboratory diagnostic techniques for Entamoeba species;R Fotedar;Clin Microbiol Rev,2007
4. Pathogenesis of intestinal amebiasis: from molecules to disease;M Espinosa-Cantellano;Clin Microbiol Rev,2000
5. Amebiasis.;BS Pritt;Mayo Clin Proc,2008
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献