Phylogenetic analyses of Chilomastix and Retortamonas species using in vitro excysted flagellates

Author:

Suzuki Jun1,Sardar Sanjib Kumar2,Ghosal Ajanta2,Yoshida Naoko3,Kurai Hanako4,Takahashi Yudai Alex5,Saito-Nakano Yumiko6,Ganguly Sandipan2,Kobayashi Seiki6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Public Health, Japan

2. National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases, India

3. Juntendo University, Japan

4. Shizuoka Cancer Center, Japan

5. Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan

6. National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Japan

Abstract

Abstract In vitro excystation of cysts of microscopically identified Chilomastix mesnili and Retortamonas sp. isolated from Japanese macaques and Retortamonas sp. isolated from small Indian mongooses could be induced using an established protocol for Giardia intestinalis and subsequently by culturing with H2S-rich Robinson’s medium supplemented with Desulfovibrio desulfuricans. Excystation usually began 2 h after incubation in Robinson’s medium. DNA was isolated from excysted flagellates after 4 h of incubation or from cultured excysted flagellates. Phylogenetic analysis based on their 18S rRNA genes revealed that two isolates of C. mesnili from Japanese macaques belonged to the same cluster as a C. mesnili isolate from humans, whereas a mammalian Retortamonas sp. isolate from a small Indian mongoose belonged to the same cluster as that of an amphibian Retortamonas spp. isolate from a ‘poison arrow frog’ [sequence identity to AF439347 (94.9%)]. These results suggest that the sequence homology of the 18S rRNA gene of the two C. mesnili isolates from Japanese macaques was similar to that of humans, in addition to the morphological similarity, and Retortamonas sp. infection of the amphibian type in the small Indian mongoose highlighted the possibility of the effect of host feeding habitats.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

General Veterinary,Parasitology

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