Genetic characterization of zoonotic hookworms infecting wild felids in northern India.

IF 2.6 2区 农林科学 Q1 VETERINARY SCIENCES BMC Veterinary Research Pub Date : 2025-03-22 DOI:10.1186/s12917-025-04641-y
Thangam Venkatesan, Rasmita Panda, Anil Kumar Nehra, Hira Ram, M Karikalan, Devendra Prasad Pateer, Rajat Garg, A M Pawde
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Abstract

Background: Hookworms are the most common soil-transmitted helminths that inhabit the small intestine of various domesticated and wild animals. Despite their conservation status, there is a paucity of research on hookworm infections in wild felids. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence of hookworm infections in wild felids in northern India and to genetically characterize the hookworms. Faecal samples (n = 96) from wild felids (lion, tiger, leopard, panther, jungle cat, and civet cat) were examined for helminthic infections. Samples positive for hookworms were subsequently subjected to molecular analysis targeting the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, followed by sequencing and phylogenetic analysis.

Results: Among helminthic infections, Ancylostoma spp. ranked second (7.3%) after Toxocara cati (13.5%). Molecular analysis identified two species, A. caninum and A. ceylanicum. Phylogenetic analysis revealed distinct monophyletic clades for each species. Ancylostoma caninum formed a large clade with two subclades, one comprising Asian isolates and the other encompassing isolates from the Americas and Australia, whereas A. ceylanicum formed a single clade. Nucleotide identities ranged from 97.9 to 100% for A. caninum and from 99.1 to 100% for A. ceylanicum. Haplotype network analysis revealed eight haplotypes for A. caninum and six for A. ceylanicum. Genetic diversity correlated with geographic distance for A. caninum isolates, with Asian populations exhibiting high haplotype diversity but low nucleotide diversity. Neutrality indices suggested population stability for A. caninum and expansion for A. ceylanicum. Continent-wise analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) indicated that 52.66% of the variation occurred within A. caninum populations, while 47.34% occurred between populations.

Conclusions: This study highlighted the genetic diversity and molecular epidemiology of hookworms in wild felids.

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印度北部野生田中人畜共患钩虫的遗传特征。
背景:钩虫是最常见的土壤传播蠕虫,栖息在各种家养和野生动物的小肠中。尽管它们处于保护状态,但对野生田中钩虫感染的研究却很少。本研究旨在调查印度北部野生田中钩虫感染的流行情况,并对钩虫进行遗传表征。对野生猫科动物(狮子、老虎、豹子、豹子、丛林猫和果子狸)的粪便样本(n = 96)进行寄生虫感染检查。随后,对钩虫阳性样本进行针对ITS区域的分子分析,然后进行测序和系统发育分析。结果:在寄生虫感染中,钩虫排在第二位(7.3%),仅次于猫弓虫(13.5%)。分子分析鉴定出犬芽孢杆菌(A. caninum)和球芽孢杆菌(A. cylanicum)两种。系统发育分析显示每个物种都有不同的单系进化枝。犬钩虫形成了一个大的分支,有两个亚分支,一个包括亚洲分离株,另一个包括来自美洲和澳大利亚的分离株,而球兰钩虫形成了一个单一的分支。犬芽孢杆菌的核苷酸识别度在97.9% ~ 100%之间,瓜兰芽孢杆菌的核苷酸识别度在99.1% ~ 100%之间。单倍型网络分析结果显示,犬蠓有8个单倍型,球兰蠓有6个单倍型。遗传多样性与地理距离相关,亚洲种群单倍型多样性高,核苷酸多样性低。中性指数表明犬蠓种群稳定,黄蠓种群扩大。分子变异(AMOVA)分析表明,52.66%的变异发生在犬蠓种群内,47.34%的变异发生在种群间。结论:本研究强调了野外钩虫的遗传多样性和分子流行病学。
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来源期刊
BMC Veterinary Research
BMC Veterinary Research VETERINARY SCIENCES-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
3.80%
发文量
420
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Veterinary Research is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of veterinary science and medicine, including the epidemiology, diagnosis, prevention and treatment of medical conditions of domestic, companion, farm and wild animals, as well as the biomedical processes that underlie their health.
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