Apicomplexa is a large monophyletic phylum of unicellular, parasitic organisms. Reptiles are hosts to both haemosporidian (Haemosporida) and hemogregarine (Eucoccidiorida) apicomplexan blood parasites. Within reptiles our understanding of their diversity remains limited, with a paucity of information from Australia, despite a high diversity of squamates (snakes and lizards). We provide a preliminary assessment of haemosporidian and hemogregarine diversity occurring in lizards across northern tropical Australia, building on existing data with results from a microscopy and genetic assessment. We screened total of 233 blood slides using microscopy and detected hemogregarines in 25 geckos, 2 skinks and 1 agamid, while haemosporidians were detected in 13 geckos. DNA sequencing of 28 samples of the hemogregarine 18S rRNA (∼900 bp) nuclear gene revealed five lineages of Australian lizard hemogregarines within heteroxenous adeleids. We sequenced 10 samples of Haemosporida mtDNA (cytb & coI: ∼1313 bp) and phylogenetic analysis with 30 previously published sequences revealed that the Australian Haemosporida grouped within the Haemoproteidae but were not supported as a monophyletic clade. Our results demonstrate that there is significant undocumented evolutionary diversity in Australian lizard haemosporidian and hemogregarine parasites, with preliminary evidence of significantly higher infection rates in geckos.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2021.107358 | DOI Listing |
Mol Phylogenet Evol
February 2022
Museums Victoria, PO Box 666, Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia; School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton Victoria 3800, Australia. Electronic address:
Apicomplexa is a large monophyletic phylum of unicellular, parasitic organisms. Reptiles are hosts to both haemosporidian (Haemosporida) and hemogregarine (Eucoccidiorida) apicomplexan blood parasites. Within reptiles our understanding of their diversity remains limited, with a paucity of information from Australia, despite a high diversity of squamates (snakes and lizards).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Parasitol Parasites Wildl
April 2018
São Paulo State University (Unesp), School of Agricultural and Veterinarian Studies, Jaboticabal Campus, Via de Acesso Professor Paulo Donato Castellane s/n, 14.884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil.
Morphological and molecular techniques were used to investigate the presence of hemogregarines and haemosporidians in biological samples of free-living Geoffroy's side-necked turtles () and Giant Amazon turtles () from Brazil. No evolutionary form of haemosporidians or hemogregarines were observed in the blood smears of 83 samples, and there were no meronts in the histological sections of 31 necropsied samples. All DNA samples extracted from tissues and blood aliquots were negative in haemosporidian PCR assays (based on the mitochondrial cytochrome gene) and hemogregarine PCR assays (based on the 18S rRNA gene).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Parasitol
August 2006
Museum of Natural Science, Louisiana State University, 119 Foster Hall, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803, USA.
A sample of 204 skinks (Squamata: Scincidae) from 10 genera representing 24 species were collected from 10 different localities in New Guinea and examined for blood parasites. Hemogregarines, trypanosomes, microfilarial worms, and 8 infections showing 2 distinct morphological types of malaria parasites (Plasmodium sp.) were observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Parasitol
August 2001
Department of Biology, University of Vermont, Burlington 05405, USA.
Hemogregarines, apicomplexan intracellular blood parasites, are cosmopolitan in distribution and infect a broad range of vertebrate and invertebrate hosts. Molecular phylogenetic studies have been hampered by lack of hemogregarine-specific polymerase chain reaction primers that would allow amplification of parasite, but not host, DNA. A novel method for separating parasite and host 18S rRNA genes has been developed, and new primers that are specific for hemogregarine rRNA genes have been designed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Parasitol
October 1999
Department of Biology, University of Vermont, Burlington 05405, USA.
We demonstrate that a set of previously described polymerase chain reaction primers used for detection of hemogregarines in reptiles will also amplify the same region of the 18S rRNA gene of reptiles, amphibians, mammals, and insects and thus should not be used for molecular diagnosis. These same primers have also been used to differentiate 2 species of Plasmodium that infect lizards. We provide evidence that the observed variance may have been dependent on parasitemia and not representative of actual molecular differences between the 2 parasite species.
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