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Mitochondrial genome of Plasmodium vivax/simium detected in an endemic region for malaria in the Atlantic Forest of Espirito Santo state, Brazil: do mosquitoes, simians and humans harbour the same parasite?
被引:26
|作者:
Buery, Julyana Cerqueira
[1
]
Rodrigues, Priscila Thihara
[2
]
Natal, Licia
[3
]
Salla, Lais Camoese
[2
]
Loss, Ana Carolina
[4
]
Vicente, Creuza Rachel
[1
]
Rezende, Helder Ricas
[5
]
de Castro Duarte, Ana Maria Ribeiro
[6
]
Fux, Blima
[1
]
Malafronte, Rosely dos Santos
[3
]
Falqueto, Aloisio
[1
]
Cerutti, Crispim, Jr.
[1
]
机构:
[1] Univ Fed Espirito Santo, Trop Med Unit, Ave Marechal Campos,1468 Maruipe, BR-29043900 Vitoria, Espirito Santo, Spain
[2] Univ Sao Paulo, Dept Parasitol, Ave Prof Lineu Prestes 1374, BR-05508900 Sao Paulo, Brazil
[3] Univ Sao Paulo, Trop Med Inst, Ave Doutor Eneas Carvalho Aguiar 470, BR-05403000 Sao Paulo, Brazil
[4] Univ Fed Espirito Santo, Lab Mastozool & Biogeog, Ave Fernando Ferrari 514, Vitoria, Espirito Santo, Spain
[5] Hlth Dept Espirito Santo State, Nucleus Entomol & Malacol Espirito Santo, Rua Pedro Zangrandi 320, BR-29164020 Serra, Espirito Santo, Brazil
[6] State Secretary Hlth Sao Paulo, Superintendency Control Endemies SUCEN, Rua Paula Souza 166, BR-01027000 Sao Paulo, Brazil
来源:
关键词:
Anopheles;
Malaria;
Epidemiology;
Real-time polymerase chain reaction;
DNA;
mitochondrial;
Sequence analyses;
Zoonoses;
CIRCUMSPOROZOITE PROTEIN GENE;
SAO-PAULO;
VIVAX;
MONKEYS;
RESERVOIRS;
INFECTION;
AREAS;
BRASILIANUM;
SIMIUM;
D O I:
10.1186/s12936-017-2080-9
中图分类号:
R51 [传染病];
学科分类号:
100401 ;
摘要:
Background: The transmission of malaria in the extra-Amazonian regions of Brazil, although interrupted in the 1960s, has persisted to the present time in some areas of dense Atlantic Forest, with reports of cases characterized by particular transmission cycles and clinical presentations. Bromeliad-malaria, as it is named, is particularly frequent in the state of Espirito Santo, with Plasmodium vivax being the parasite commonly recognized as the aetiologic agent of human infections. With regard to the spatial and temporal distances between cases reported in this region, the transmission cycle does not fit the traditional malaria cycle. The existence of a zoonosis, with infected simians participating in the epidemiology, is therefore hypothesized. In the present study, transmission of bromeliad-malaria in Espirito Santo is investigated, based on the complete mitochondrial genome of DNA extracted from isolates of Plasmodium species, which had infected humans, a simian from the genus Allouata, and Anopheles mosquitoes. Plasmodium vivax/simium was identified in the samples by both nested PCR and real-time PCR. After amplification, the mitochondrial genome was completely sequenced and compared with a haplotype network which included all sequences of P. vivax/simium mitochondrial genomes sampled from humans and simians from all regions in Brazil. Results: The haplotype network indicates that humans and simians from the Atlantic Forest become infected by the same haplotype, but some isolates from humans are not identical to the simian isolate. In addition, the plasmodial DNA extracted from mosquitoes revealed sequences different from those obtained from simians, but similar to two isolates from humans. Conclusions: These findings strengthen support for the hypothesis that in the Atlantic Forest, and especially in the state with the highest frequency of bromeliad-malaria in Brazil, parasites with similar molecular backgrounds are shared by humans and simians. The recognized identity between P. vivax and P. simium at the species level, the sharing of haplotypes, and the participation of the same vector in transmitting the infection to both host species indicate interspecies transference of the parasites. However, the intensity, frequency and direction of this transfer remain to be clarified.
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