Genetic diversity within Strongyloides fuelleborni: Mitochondrial genome analysis reveals a clear African and Asian division

Travis Richins, Sarah G.H. Sapp, Alexandra Juhasz, Lucas J. Cunningham, E. James Lacourse, J. Russell Stothard, Joel L.N. Barratt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Following the recent report of strongyloidiasis caused by Strongyloides fuelleborni within a semi-captive colony of baboons in a UK safari park, we investigated the genetic relationships of this isolate with other Strongyloides isolates across the world. Whole genome sequence (WGS) data were generated with later phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial (mt) cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) and nuclear ribosomal 18S sequences against 300 published Strongyloides reference genotypes. The putative African origin of the UK S. fuelleborni was confirmed and full length mt genome sequences were assembled to facilitate a more detailed phylogenetic analysis of 14 mt coding regions against all available Strongyloides species. Our analyses demonstrated that the UK isolate represented a novel African lineage not previously described. Additional complete mt genomes were assembled for several individual UK safari park worms to reveal a slightly altered mt genome gene arrangement, allowing clear separation from Asian S. fuelleborni. Furthermore, these UK worms possessed expanded intergenic regions of unknown function that increase their mt genome size to approximately 24 kilobases (kb) as compared with some 16 kb for Asian S. fuelleborni; this may have arisen from unique populational founder and genetic drift effects set within the peculiar mixed species baboon and drill ancestry of this semi- captive primate colony. A maximum likelihood phylogeny constructed from 14 mitochondrial coding regions supported an evolutionary distinction between Asian and African S. fuelleborni, most likely supporting paraphyly.

Original languageEnglish
JournalParasitology
Early online date23 Jun 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 23 Jun 2025

Keywords

  • Africa
  • Asia
  • paraphyly
  • population structure
  • Strongyloides fuelleborni
  • strongyloidiasis

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