Cryptosporidium spp
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2020.01.002 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AE081B-FF92-FFF5-FFFF-FA8228F08C93 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cryptosporidium spp |
status |
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3.2. Sequence analysis of Cryptosporidium spp . from reptiles
The partial fragment of the SSU gene (401 bp) was successfully amplified and sequenced in both of the lizards. SSU sequences from two lizards were identical to each other and showed 100% identity (401/ 401 bp) with the Cryptosporidium sp. (accession no. LC310795) from a brown wood owl ( Strix leptogrammica ) in Japan ( Makino et al., 2018). Identities of 99.8% (400/401 bp, derived from a single adenine insertion) for C. avium (accession nos. KU058875 and JX548299) and avian genotype II (accession nos. KU058875 and KJ487974) were also noted. Phylogenetic analyses using SSU sequences showed that the Cryptosporidium from the mastigure and brown wood owl and C. avium were monophyletic and placed within a clade of avian-associated Cryptosporidium clade ( Fig. 2 View Fig ).
Partial nucleotide sequences of the actin (1831 bp) and HSP70 (918 bp) genes were successfully amplified and sequenced from the Arabian blue mastigure. The sequence at the actin gene was 99% identity (906/ 918bp) with Cryptosporidium sp. from the brown wood owl (accession no. LC310796) and C. avium from the common ostrich ( Struthio camelus ) (accession no. AB696815) and red-crowned parakeet ( Cyanoramphus novaezelandiae ) (accession no. KU058882). The sequence of the HSP70 gene showed 98.4% (1801/1831 bp) to 98.3% (1798/1829bp) identities with C. avium from several pet birds (accession nos. JQ798893, AB471665, MK311173). Moreover, an identity of 97.6% (1787/1831 bp) was found between this isolate and the brown wood owl (accession no. LC310797). The phylogenetic tree using concatenating data across multiple sequences of SSU, actin, and HSP70 genes revealed that the present species clustered with the Cryptosporidium species recorded from the brown wood owl, and this clade appeared to branch near the monophyletic C. avium clade ( Fig. 3 View Fig ).
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