Human-type and pig-type Ascaris hybrids found in pigs

•Ascaris lumbricoides and A. suum were examined for cross-infection and hybridization.•Hybrid identification by the two methods was inconsistent.•Microsatellite markers can be used for more reliable identification of hybrids.•Hybrid Ascaris were found to infected pigs in Xinjian County, Jiangxi Prov...

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Veröffentlicht in:Veterinary parasitology 2022-02, Vol.302, p.109646-109646, Article 109646
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Chunhua, Lei, Yao, Zhao, Shuai, Shi, Qinhua, Ouyang, Shan, Wu, Xiaoping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Ascaris lumbricoides and A. suum were examined for cross-infection and hybridization.•Hybrid identification by the two methods was inconsistent.•Microsatellite markers can be used for more reliable identification of hybrids.•Hybrid Ascaris were found to infected pigs in Xinjian County, Jiangxi Province. The discovery of hybrids between Ascaris lumbricoides and Ascaris suum has complicated our understanding of the relationship between the two species. We examined the same Ascaris specimens (48 from humans and 48 from pigs) using two methods: microsatellite markers combined with Bayesian clustering and PCR-RFLP of the nuclear internal transcribed spacer region. The results obtained by the two methods were inconsistent but showed that hybrid Ascaris identified through both approaches could infect pigs. The results of this study suggest that PCR-RFLP of ITS alone is not suitable for molecular identification of human-type and pig-type Ascaris hybrids. Use of multiple SSR markers combined with Bayesian analysis was the most reliable method in our study. Our results indicate that, in addition to host-specific Ascaris types, there may be some that do not show host specificity. Our results show for the first time that hybrid individuals can infect pigs as well as humans. This study has important theoretical and practical implications, including suggesting the need to re-evaluate long-term ascariasis control strategies.
ISSN:0304-4017
1873-2550
DOI:10.1016/j.vetpar.2021.109646