Genetic diversity in Leishmania infantum and Leishmania tropica isolates from human and canine hosts in northern Morocco

•Our research investigated the genetic variations among CL, VL, and CanL strains in northern Morocco.•Molecular and genetic analyses uncovered a complex array of genetic variants in the L. infantum and L. tropica species. The number of these variants is 7 and 9 for L. tropica and L. infantum species...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gene 2024-08, Vol.921, p.148484-148484, Article 148484
Hauptverfasser: Hakkour, Maryam, Badaoui, Bouabid, El Hamiani Khatat, Sarah, Sahibi, Hamid, Fellah, Hajiba, Sadak, Abderrahim, Sebti, Faiza
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Our research investigated the genetic variations among CL, VL, and CanL strains in northern Morocco.•Molecular and genetic analyses uncovered a complex array of genetic variants in the L. infantum and L. tropica species. The number of these variants is 7 and 9 for L. tropica and L. infantum species, respectively.•The Discriminant Analysis of Principal Components (DAPC) revealed significant genetic divergences among L. infantum strains. This suggests the influence of species origin on their genetic makeup. This study investigated nine provinces in northern Morocco and collected 275 skin scraping, 22 bone marrow aspirates, and 89 fine needle aspirations from suspected cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) and visceral leishmaniasis (VL) patients and potentially infected dogs. Molecular analysis using ITS1 RFLP PCR and RT-PCR revealed a higher prevalence of L. infantum (66.18 %; χ2 = 28.804; df = 1; P-value = 8.01e−08) than L. tropica in skin scraping, with L. infantum being the sole causative agent for both VL and canine leishmaniasis. L. infantum was predominantly found in most provinces, while L. tropica was relatively more dominant in Taza Province. Discriminant Analysis of Principal Components (DAPC) revealed distinct clustering between L. tropica and the other three species. However, no small subset of SNPs could clearly differentiate between Infantum_CL, Infantum_VL, and CanL, as they likely share a significant genetic background. The high rate of L. infantum could be attributed to the abundance of sand fly species transmitting VL. In Taza Province, Phlebotomus sergenti, responsible for anthroponotic CL, is the most abundant species. DNA sequencing demonstrated sequence heterogeneity in L. infantum (variants 1-9) and L. tropica (variants 1-7). Phylogenetic analysis showed a distinct separation between L. tropica and L. infantum strains, with an overlap among L. infantum strains isolated from cutaneous, visceral, and canine cases, and dogs serving as the central population for L. infantum.
ISSN:0378-1119
1879-0038
DOI:10.1016/j.gene.2024.148484