Development of Highly Efficient Universal Pneumocystis Primers and Their Application in Investigating the Prevalence and Genetic Diversity of Pneumocystis in Wild Hares and Rabbits

Author:

Ma Liang1ORCID,Lin Isabella1,Hunter Summer T.2,Blasi Barbara3ORCID,Danesi Patrizia4ORCID,Weissenbacher-Lang Christiane3ORCID,Cisse Ousmane H.1ORCID,Rothenburger Jamie L.2,Kovacs Joseph A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Critical Care Medicine Department, National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA

2. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary, Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative (Alberta Region), Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada

3. Department of Biological Sciences and Pathobiology, Institute of Pathology, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, 1210 Wien, Austria

4. Laboratory of Parasitology, Mycology and Medical Enthomology, Istituto Zooprofilattico delle Venezie, 35020 Legnaro, Italy

Abstract

Despite its ubiquitous infectivity to mammals with strong host specificity, our current knowledge about Pneumocystis has originated from studies of merely 4% of extant mammalian species. Further studies of Pneumocystis epidemiology across a broader range of animal species require the use of assays with high sensitivity and specificity. To this end, we have developed multiple universal Pneumocystis primers targeting different genetic loci with high amplification efficiency. Application of these primers to PCR investigation of Pneumocystis in free-living hares (Lepus townsendii, n = 130) and rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus, n = 8) in Canada revealed a prevalence of 81% (105/130) and 25% (2/8), respectively. Genotyping analysis identified five and two variants of Pneumocystis from hares and rabbits, respectively, with significant sequence divergence between the variants from hares. Based on phylogenetic analysis using nearly full-length sequences of the mitochondrial genome, nuclear rRNA operon and dihydropteroate synthase gene for the two most common variants, Pneumocystis in hares and rabbits are more closely related to each other than either are to Pneumocystis in other mammals. Furthermore, Pneumocystis in both hares and rabbits are more closely related to Pneumocystis in primates and dogs than to Pneumocystis in rodents. The high prevalence of Pneumocystis in hares (P. sp. ‘townsendii’) suggests its widespread transmissibility in the natural environment, similar to P. oryctolagi in rabbits. The presence of multiple distinct Pneumocystis populations in hares contrasts with the lack of apparent intra-species heterogeneity in P. oryctolagi, implying a unique evolution history of P. sp. ‘townsendii’ in hares.

Funder

National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center

University of Calgary and the Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative

Publisher

MDPI AG

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