Affiliation:
1. Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
2. Department of Medical Microbiology and Genitourinary Medicine, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
An 840-bp fragment of the 18S rRNA gene was used to identify
Cryptosporidium
spp. recovered from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected and -uninfected patients from Kenya, Malawi, Brazil, the United Kingdom, and Vietnam. Initial identification was by Ziehl-Neelsen acid-fast staining. Confirmation was by nested PCR, targeting the most polymorphic region of the 18S rRNA gene. Genotyping was by restriction endonuclease digestion of the PCR product followed by nucleotide sequencing. Among 63 isolates analyzed, four genotypes of
Cryptosporidium
were identified; 75% of the isolates were of the
C
.
parvum
human genotype, while the potentially zoonotic species were of the
C. parvum
bovine genotype (21.7%), the
C
.
meleagridis
genotype (1.6% [one isolate]), and the
C
.
muris
genotype (1.6% [one case]). HIV-infected individuals were more likely to have zoonotic genotypes than the HIV-uninfected individuals. Among the
C. parvum
group, strains clustered distinctly into either human or bovine genotypes regardless of the geographical origin, age, or HIV status of the patients. The intragenotypic variation observed in the
C. parvum
human genotype was extensive compared to that within the
C. parvum
bovine genotype group. The variation within genotypes was conserved in all geographical regions regardless of the patients' HIV status. The extensive diversity within genotypes at the 18S rRNA gene locus may limit its application to phylogenetic analyses.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
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5. Molecular Characterization of
Cryptosporidium
Isolates Obtained from Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Individuals Living in Switzerland, Kenya, and the United States
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