AI Article Synopsis

  • Enterocytozoon bieneusi is a microsporidia parasite that can infect both humans and animals, with golden snub-nosed monkeys being particularly susceptible and at risk for zoonotic transmission.
  • A study analyzed 160 golden snub-nosed monkeys from various zoos in China, finding a high prevalence of 46.2% for E. bieneusi, with seven different genotypes identified, including some that show potential for zoonotic transmission.
  • The dominant genotypes found were D and J, indicating that these monkeys could act as reservoirs for the parasite, potentially implicating them in human microsporidiosis cases.

Article Abstract

Background: Enterocytozoon bieneusi is the dominant specie of microsporidia which can infect both anthroponotic and zoonotic species. The golden snub-nosed monkey is an endangered primate which can also infect by E. bieneusi. To date, few genetic data on E. bieneusi from golden snub-nosed monkeys has been published. Therefore, to clarify the prevalence and genotypes of E. bieneusi in captive golden snub-nosed monkeys is necessary to assess the potential for zoonotic transmission.

Result: We examined 160 golden snub-nosed monkeys from six zoos in four cities in China, using PCR and comparative sequence analysis of the ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS). The overall prevalence of E. bieneusi was 46.2% (74/160); while the prevalence was 26.7%, 69.1%, 69.4% and 33.3% in Shanghai Zoo, Shanghai Wild Animal Park, Tongling Zoo, and Taiyuan Zoo respectively (P = 0.006). A total of seven E. bieneusi genotypes were found that included four known (D, J, CHG1, and CHG14) and three new (CM19-CM 21) genotypes. The most common genotype was D (54/74, 73.0%), followed by J (14/74, 18.9%); other genotypes were restricted to one or two samples. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that genotype D belonged to the previously-characterized Group 1, with zoonotic potential; whereas genotypes J, CHG1, CHG14 and CM19-CM 21 clustered in the previously-characterized Group 2, the so-called cattle host specificity group.

Conclusions: The findings of high prevalence of zoonotic E. bieneusi genotypes D and J in golden snub-nosed monkeys suggest that golden snub-nosed monkeys may be the reservoir hosts for human microsporidiosis, and vice versa.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5460354PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12917-017-1084-6DOI Listing

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