Abstract
AbstractSnails of the family Lymnaeidae are of great parasitological importance due to
the numerous helminth species they transmit, mainly trematodiases (such as
fascioliasis) of considerable medical and veterinary impact. The present
knowledge of the genetics and host–parasite relationships of this gastropod
group is far from adequate. Fascioliasis is caused by two species,
Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica, which,
as in the case of other trematodes, show a marked snail host specificity. Many
lymnaeid species involved in fascioliasis transmission still show a confused
systematic-taxonomic status. The need for tools to distinguish and characterize
species and populations of lymnaeids is evident and the present review concerns
new molecular tools developed in recent years using nuclear ribosomal DNA
sequences. The small subunit or 18S gene and the internal transcribed spacers
ITS-2 and ITS-1 are analysed and evaluated as markers for taxon differentiation
and relationships within the Lymnaeidae from genus and species levels to
subspecies and population levels. rDNA sequence differences and genetic
distances, and their value for reconstructing phylogenetic trees using different
methods are considered. Nuclear rDNA sequences are appropriate tools on which to
base a review of the systematics and taxonomy of the family Lymnaeidae, without
excluding other valuable snail characteristics already available. A
reconstruction of the lymnaeid system towards a more natural classification will
undoubtedly be helpful in understanding parasite transmission and
epidemiological features as well the dispersion of an emerging-reemerging
disease such as fascioliasis. Nomenclature for nuclear rDNA genotyping in
lymnaeids includes the main rDNA sequence regions able to furnish important
information on interspecific differentiation and grouping as well as
intraspecific variability of lymnaeid species. The composite haplotype code
includes the rDNA markers arranged in order according to their well-known
usefulness, in its turn related to their respective, more or less rapid
evolutionary ratios, to distinguish between different taxonomic levels, from
supraspecific taxa to the species level and up to the population level.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Parasitology
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