Browse > Article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2018.56.4.379

Molecular and Morphologic Identification of Spirometra ranarum Found in the Stool of African Lion, Panthera leo in the Serengeti Plain of Tanzania  

Eom, Keeseon S. (Department of Parasitology, Medical Research Institute and Parasite Resource Bank, Chungbuk National University School of Medicine)
Park, Hansol (Department of Parasitology, Medical Research Institute and Parasite Resource Bank, Chungbuk National University School of Medicine)
Lee, Dongmin (Department of Parasitology, Medical Research Institute and Parasite Resource Bank, Chungbuk National University School of Medicine)
Choe, Seongjun (Department of Parasitology, Medical Research Institute and Parasite Resource Bank, Chungbuk National University School of Medicine)
Kang, Yeseul (Department of Parasitology, Medical Research Institute and Parasite Resource Bank, Chungbuk National University School of Medicine)
Bia, Mohammed Mebarek (Department of Parasitology, Medical Research Institute and Parasite Resource Bank, Chungbuk National University School of Medicine)
Lee, Sang-Hwa (Department of Parasitology, Medical Research Institute and Parasite Resource Bank, Chungbuk National University School of Medicine)
Keyyu, Julius (Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute)
Fyumagwa, Robert (Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute)
Jeon, Hyeong-Kyu (Department of Parasitology, Medical Research Institute and Parasite Resource Bank, Chungbuk National University School of Medicine)
Publication Information
Parasites, Hosts and Diseases / v.56, no.4, 2018 , pp. 379-383 More about this Journal
Abstract
The present study was performed with morphological and molecular analysis (cox1 and nad1 mitochondrial genes) to identify the proglottids of spirometrid tapeworm found in the stool of an African lion, Panthera leo, in the Serengeti plain of Tanzania. A strand of tapeworm strobila, about 75 cm in length, was obtained in the stool of a male African lion in the Serengeti National Park ($34^{\circ}$ 50' E, $02^{\circ}$ 30' S), Tanzania, in February 2012. The morphological features of the adult worm examined exhibited 3 uterine coils with a bow tie appearance and adopted a diagonal direction in the second turn. The posterior uterine coils are larger than terminal uterine ball and the feature of uteri are swirling rather than spirally coiling. The sequence difference between the Spirometra species (Tanzania origin) and S. erinaceieuropaei (GenBank no. KJ599680) was 9.4% while those of S. decipiens (GenBank no. KJ599679) differed by 2.1% in the cox1 and nad1 genes. Phylogenetic tree topologies generated using the 2 analytic methods were identical and presented high level of confidence values for the 3 major branches of the 3 Spirometra species in the cox1 gene. The morphological and molecular findings obtained in this study were nearly coincided with those of S. ranarum. Therefore, we can know for the first time that the African lion, Panthera leo, is to the definitive host of this tapeworm.
Keywords
Spirometra ranarum; cox1; nad1; lion; Tanzania;
Citations & Related Records
연도 인용수 순위
  • Reference
1 Berensten AR, Becker MS, Stockdale-Walden H, Matandiko W, McRobb R, Dunbar MR. Survey of gastrointestinal parasite infection in African lion (Panthera leo), African wild dog (Lycaon pictus) and spotted hyaena (Crocuta crocuta) in the Luangwa Valley, Zambia. Afr Zool 2012; 47: 363-368.   DOI
2 Muller-Graf CD. A coprological survey of intestinal parasites of wild lions (Panthera leo) in the Serengeti and the Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania, East Africa. J Parasitol 1995; 8: 812-814.
3 Bjork KE, Averbeck AG, Stromberg BE. Parasites and parasite stages of free-ranging wild lions (Panthera leo) of northern Tanzania. J Zoo Wild Med 2000; 31: 56-61.   DOI
4 Muller-Graf CD, Woolhouse ME, Packer C. Epidemiology of an intestinal parasite (Spirometra spp.) in two populations of African lions (Panthera leo). Parasitology 1999; 118: 407-415.   DOI
5 Kuntz RE, Myers BJ, Katzberg AA. Sparganosis and "proliferative" spargana in vervets (Cercopithecus aethiops) and baboons (Papio sp.) from East Africa. J Parasitol 1970; 56: 196-197.   DOI
6 Nobrega-Lee M, Hubbard G, Loverde P, Carvalho-Queiroz C, Conn DB, Rohde K, Dick EJ Jr, Nathanielsz P, Martin D, Siler-Khodr T, Schlabritz-Loutsevitch N. Sparganosis in wild-caught baboons (Papio cynocephalus anubis). J Med Primatol 2007; 36: 47-54.   DOI
7 Jeon HK, Park H, Lee D, Choe S, Kim KH, Huh S, Sohn WM, Chai JY, Eom KS. Human infections with Spirometra decipiens plerocercoids identified by morphologic and genetic analyses in Korea. Korean J Parasitol 2015; 53: 299-305.   DOI
8 Stamatakis A. RAxML-VI-HPC: maximum likelihood based phylogenetic analyses with thousands of taxa and mixed models. Bioinformatics 2006; 22: 2688-2690.   DOI
9 Lanfear R, Calcott B, Ho SY, Guindon S. PartitionFinder: combined selection of partitioning schemes and substitution models for phylogenetic analyses. Mol Bio Evol 2012; 29: 1695-1701.   DOI
10 Ronquist F, Huelsenbeck JP. MrBayes 3: Baysian phylogenetic inference under mixed models. Bioinformatics 2003; 9: 1572-1574.
11 Graber M. Diphyllobothriose et sparganose en Afrique tropicale. Rev Elev Med Vet Pays Trop 1981; 34 303-311.
12 Kamo H. Guide to Identification of Diphyllobothriid Cestodes. Tokyo, Japan. Gendai Kikaku. 1999, pp 1-146 (in Japanese).
13 Jongthawin J, Intapan PM, Sanpool O, Sadaow L, Laymanivong S, Thanchomnang T, Maleewong W. Molecular evidence of Spirometra erinaceieuropaei infection in snakes Ptyas korros from Lao PDR and Thailand and frogs Hoplobatrachus rugulosus from Myanmar. Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health 2014; 45: 1271-1278.
14 Okamoto M, Iseto S, Shibahara T, Sato MO, Wandra T, Craig PS, Ito A. Intraspecific variation of Spirometra erinaceieuropaei and phylogenetic relationship between Spirometra and Diphyllobothrium inferred from mitochondrial CO1 gene sequence. Parasitol Int 2007; 56: 235-238.   DOI
15 Faust EC, Campbell HE, Kellogg CR. Morphological and biological studies on the species of Diphyllobothrium in China. Am J Epidemiol 1929; 9: 560-583.   DOI
16 McIntosh A. New Host Records for Diphyllobothrium mansonoides Mueller, 1935. J Parasitol 1937; 23: 313-315.
17 Schmidt GD. CRC Handbook of Tapeworm Identification. Boca Raton, USA. CRC Press. 1986.
18 Nelson GS, Pester FR, Rickman R. The significance of wild animals in the transmission of cestodes of medical importance in Kenya. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 1965; 59: 507-524.   DOI
19 Baer JG. Contributions to the helminth fauna of South Africa. Mammalian Cestodes. Africa Dept Agric Rept Dir Vet Educ and Res 1926; 11: 63-136.
20 Engh AL, Nelson KG, Peebles R, Hernandez AD, Hubbard KK, Holekamp KE. Coprologic survey of parasites of spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) in the Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya. J Wildl Dis 2003; 39: 224-227.   DOI