4 research outputs found
Molecular taxonomic study of Trichinella spp. from mammals of Russian Arctic and subarctic areas
Analysis of taxonomic affiliation of Trichinella species circulating in the Chukotka Autonomous Region and some subarctic areas of the Russian Federation showed that the representatives of T. spiralis and the Arctic trichinellas - T. nativa (genotype T2) and Trichinella sp. (genotype T6) can be found there. The partial sequences of Coxb (704 bp) of these Arctic Trichinella spp. from Russia differ from Coxb sequences of those genotypes (T2 and T6) deposited in NCBI GenBank (1-3 bp). The cultivated larvae of Trichinella sp., which were established from muscular tissue sample of stray cat (shot on the fur farm in Chukotka peninslula) differ at molecular level (Coxb) even more significantly; 21-24 bp difference between Trichinella sp. and T. nativa and 46-47 bp difference between the same isolate and T. spiralis were recorded
A survey of helminths of polar bears in the Russian Arctic
The polar bear Ursus maritimus is a circumpolar species classified as vulnerable and included in the IUCN Red List. It is considered to be practically free of helminth parasites with the only species reported being Trichinella spiralis s. l. Samples of feces were collected on Chukotka coast, Wrangel Island and on ice floes in the Kara, Laptev and Chukchi seas in 2013-2015 in different seasons of the year. Coprological diagnostics was carried out using the standard flotation and sedimentation methods. In the samples collected in the snow-free period, a single sample (3.7%) was found to contain eggs of the nematode Toxascaris sp. In three out of 9 samples collected in the winter, eggs of a cestode Diphyllobothrium sp., of unidentified trematodes (presumably Heterophyidae) and of the strongylid nematode Uncinaria stenocephala were found as well as the first stage nematode larvae tentatively identified as Crenosoma sp. Viable Trichinella nativa larvae were recovered from the muscles of a female animal from north of Yakutia
Phylogenetic relationships among Toxocara spp. and Toxascaris sp. from different regions of the world
Toxocara and Toxascaris are parasitic nematodes that infect canids and felids although species of the genus
Toxocara also infect humans. This work aimed to establish the phylogenetic and phylogeographic relationship
between specimens of T. canis, T. cati, T. malaysiensis and Toxascaris leonina and to evaluate the degree of host
specificity. In total, 437 samples (adults and pools of eggs) were collected from canids and felids from eight
countries. Parasites were identified by morphology, PCR linked Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism
(PCR-RFLP) and partial sequencing of the mitochondrial gene cox1. Phylogenetic trees were constructed and
genetic distance among isolates was estimated. Based on the molecular characterization all worms were identified in agreement with their respective hosts with the exception of three samples; two from cats and one from
dogs identified as T. canis and T. cati, respectively. There was no clear geographical clustering of the samples
despite this study including parasites from three continents. This is the first study, to our knowledge, to use
molecular methods to identify T. canis in cats and T. cati in dogs with host specificity being the most common
finding. Our developed PCR-RFLP method was found to be a facile and reliable method for identifying Toxocara
species.A91F-E8B8-FA62 | Teresa Susana Letra MateusN/
A survey of helminths of polar bears in the Russian Arctic
The polar bear Ursus maritimus is a circumpolar species classified as vulnerable and included in the IUCN Red List. It is considered to be practically free of helminth parasites with the only species reported being Trichinella spiralis s. l. Samples of feces were collected on Chukotka coast, Wrangel Island and on ice floes in the Kara, Laptev and Chukchi seas in 2013-2015 in different seasons of the year. Coprological diagnostics was carried out using the standard flotation and sedimentation methods. In the samples collected in the snow-free period, a single sample (3.7%) was found to contain eggs of the nematode Toxascaris sp. In three out of 9 samples collected in the winter, eggs of a cestode Diphyllobothrium sp., of unidentified trematodes (presumably Heterophyidae) and of the strongylid nematode Uncinaria stenocephala were found as well as the first stage nematode larvae tentatively identified as Crenosoma sp. Viable Trichinella nativa larvae were recovered from the muscles of a female animal from north of Yakutia