Phylogeny and Life Cycles of the Archiacanthocephala with a Note on the Validity of Mediorhynchus gallinarum.

Acta Parasitol

Facultad de Ciencias, Instituto de Ciencias Ambientales y Evolutivas, Universidad Austral de Chile, Isla Teja s/n, Valdivia, Chile.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study analyzed the molecular profile of Mediorhynchus gallinarum collected from chickens in Indonesia to determine its phylogenetic position within the Giganthorhynchida order using mitochondrial and nuclear genes.
  • - Findings revealed low genetic variation in M. gallinarum and its close relationship to M. africanus, while the phylogenetic connections in the Archiacanthocephala class remain largely unresolved but mostly consistent across both genes examined.
  • - The distribution patterns of hosts suggest that while intermediate hosts are widespread, the limited distribution of definitive hosts restricts access to diverse potential hosts, highlighting the need for further research to enhance phylogenetic understanding and co-evolution of hosts and parasites.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The molecular profile of specimens of Mediorhynchus gallinarum (Bhalero, 1937) collected from chickens, Gallus gallus L. in Indonesia was analysed. The aim of this study was to assess the phylogenetic position of species of Mediorhynchus within the order Giganthorhynchida.

Methods: We used one mitochondrial gene (cytochrome oxidase 1) and one nuclear gene (18S ribosomal RNA) to infer phylogenetic relationships of class Archiacanthocephala.

Results: The COI and 18S rDNA genes sequences showed that M. gallinarum had low genetic variation and that this species is sister to Mediorhynchus africanus Amin, Evans, Heckmann, El-Naggar, 2013. The phylogenetic relationships of the Class Archiacanthocephala showed that it is not resolved but, however, were mostly congruent using both genes. A review of host-parasite life cycles and geographic distributions of Archiacanthocephala indicates that mainly small mammals and birds are definitive hosts, while termites, cockroaches, and millipedes are intermediate hosts.

Conclusions: While the intermediate hosts have wide geographic distributions, the narrow distribution of the definitive hosts limit the access of archiacanthocephalans to a wider range of prospective hosts. Additional analyses, to increase taxonomic and character sampling will improve the development of a robust phylogeny and provide more stable classification. The results presented here contribute to better understanding of the ecological and evolutionary relationships that allow the host-parasite co-existence within the class Archiacanthocephala.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11686-021-00472-7DOI Listing

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