Characterization of a new cosmopolitan genus of trypanosomatid parasites, Obscuromonas gen. nov. (Blastocrithidiinae subfam. nov.)
|
01.06.2021 |
Lukeš J.
Tesařová M.
Yurchenko V.
Votýpka J.
|
European Journal of Protistology |
10.1016/j.ejop.2021.125778 |
0 |
Ссылка
© 2021 Elsevier GmbH The expanding phylogenetic tree of trypanosomatid flagellates (Kinetoplastea: Trypanosomatidae) contains a long-known and phylogenetically well-supported species-rich lineage that was provisionally named as the ‘jaculum’ clade. Its members were found in representatives of several unrelated families of heteropteran bugs captured in South and Central America, Europe, Africa, and Asia. However, this group resisted introduction into the culture, a needed prerequisite for its proper characterization. Here we describe four new cultivable species, which parasitize various parts of their hosts’ intestine, including the thoracic and abdominal part of the midgut, hindgut, and Malpighian tubules. Morphologically, the cultured flagellates vary from relatively short stumpy promastigotes to long slender leptomonad cells. Some species form straphangers (cyst-like amastigotes) both in vivo and in vitro, initially attached to the basal part of the flagellum of the mother cell, from which they subsequently detach. To formally classify this enigmatic monophyletic cosmopolitan clade, we erected Obscuromonas gen. nov., including five species: O. modryi sp. nov. (isolated from the true bug host species Riptortus linearis captured in the Philippines), O. volfi sp. nov. (from Catorhintha selector, Curaçao), O. eliasi sp. nov. (from Graptostethus servus, Papua New Guinea), O. oborniki sp. nov. (from Aspilocoryphus unimaculatus, Madagascar), and O. jaculum comb. nov. (from Nepa cinerea, France). Obscuromonas along with the genus Blastocrithidia belongs to the newly established Blastocrithidiinae subfam. nov.
Читать
тезис
|
Severe babesiosis caused by Babesia divergens in a host with intact spleen, Russia, 2018
|
01.10.2019 |
Kukina I.
Zelya O.
Guzeeva T.
Karan L.
Perkovskaya I.
Tymoshenko N.
Guzeeva M.
|
Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases |
10.1016/j.ttbdis.2019.07.006 |
0 |
Ссылка
© 2019 Elsevier GmbH We report a case of severe babesiosis caused by the bovine pathogen Babesia divergens with the development of multisystem failure in a splenic host. Immunosuppression other than splenectomy can also predispose people to B. divergens. There was heavy multiple invasion of up to 14 parasites inside the erythrocyte, which had not been previously observed even in asplenic hosts. The piroplasm 18S rRNA sequence from our patient was identical B. divergens EU lineage with identity 99.5–100%.
Читать
тезис
|
Fatal human babesiosis caused by Babesia divergens in an asplenic host
|
01.01.2018 |
Kukina I.
Guzeeva T.
Zelya O.
Ganushkina L.
|
IDCases |
|
1 |
Ссылка
© 2018 I M Sechenov First Moscow University (Sechenov University), Moscow, Russian Federation We report a fatal case of human babesiosis caused by bovine pathogen Babesia divergens in Russia. Falciparum malaria was falsely diagnosed due to the presence of small ring forms in the blood smear. Laboratory diagnosis can distinguish between babesiosis and malaria according to the examination of stained blood smears.
Читать
тезис
|