AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates a unique association between two human parasites, focusing on how this symbiosis impacts infection virulence and treatment susceptibility.
  • Comprehensive analysis involved isolating 100 pure cultures from approximately 7,500 women with purulent vaginitis, utilizing PCR and sequencing to identify the types of parasites present.
  • Phylogenetic analysis showed diverse relationships among the isolates, revealing the presence of known and potentially novel species, indicating complexities in diagnosing and treating vaginal infections.

Article Abstract

The symbiosis of and is the first described association between two obligate human parasites. is the niche and the vector for the transmission of infection. This clinically significant symbiosis may affect virulence and susceptibility to treatment. The aims of this study were to investigate the intracellularly present and species in strains isolated from the vaginal discharge of infected women as well as to trace the diversity pattern among the species detected in the isolated strains. Hundred pure cultures were isolated from ~7,500 patient specimens presented with clinical purulent vaginitis. PCR and sequencing for spp. were performed in DNA extracted from the pure cultures. In addition, vaginal discharge samples were cultured for the presence of and . Phylogenetic analysis assisted the identification of interspecies relationships between the and isolates. Fifty four percentage of isolates were harboring spp. Phylogenetic analysis revealed three distinct clusters, two with already characterized and spp. (37% of total spp.), whereas one group formed a distinct cluster matched with the newly identified species (59.3%) and one or more unknown spp. (3.7%). strains associated with vaginal infection might host intracellular mycoplasmas or ureaplasmas. Intracellular Mollicutes that remain undetected in the extracellular environment when conventional diagnostic methods are implemented may comprise either novel species, such as , or unknown species with yet unexplored clinical significance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5487939PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01188DOI Listing

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