Is human giardiasis caused by two different Giardia species?

Gut Microbes

Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, BMC, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.

Published: September 2012

We have recently sequenced the genome of the human Giardia intestinalis assemblage B isolate GS.1 comparisons to the earlier sequenced genome of the human assemblage A isolate WB showed that the average amino acid identity in 4,300 orthologous proteins was only 78%. Here we discuss these results in the light of new genome sequencing data from the hoofed-animal assemblage E (isolate P15, isolated from a pig) and further characterization of assemblage A and B isolates from humans. There is a highly conserved set of core genes (4,557 genes, 91% of genome) common to all isolates. The largest genomic differences are found in variable, Giardia-specific gene families and a large number of chromosomal rearrangements were detected, even between different chromosomes. Surprisingly, the assemblage E and A isolates are more similar at the amino-acid level than the two human isolates are to each other. This strengthens our earlier data suggesting that humans are infected by two different species of Giardia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3056102PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/gmic.1.6.13608DOI Listing

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