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CA88, a nuclear repetitive DNA sequence identified in Schistosoma mansoni, aids in the genotyping of nine Schistosoma species of medical and veterinary importance

CA88, a nuclear repetitive DNA sequence identified in Schistosoma mansoni, aids in the genotyping of nine Schistosoma species of medical and veterinary importance
CA88, a nuclear repetitive DNA sequence identified in Schistosoma mansoni, aids in the genotyping of nine Schistosoma species of medical and veterinary importance
CA88 is the first long nuclear repetitive DNA sequence identified in the blood fluke, Schistosoma mansoni. The assembled S. mansoni sequence, which contains the CA88 repeat, has 8,887 nucleotides and at least three repeat units of approximately 360 bp. In addition, CA88 also possesses an internal CA microsatellite, identified as SmBr18. Both PCR and BLAST analysis have been used to analyse and confirm the CA88 sequence in other S. mansoni sequences in the public database. PCR-acquired nuclear repetitive DNA sequence profiles from nine Schistosoma species were used to classify this organism into four genotypes. Included among the nine species analysed were five sequences of both African and Asian lineages that are known to infect humans. Within these genotypes, three of them refer to recognised species groups. A panel of four microsatellite loci, including SmBr18 and three previously published loci, has been used to characterise the nine Schistosoma species. Each species has been identified and classified based on its CA88 DNA fingerprint profile. Furthermore, microsatellite sequences and intra-specific variation have also been observed within the nine Schistosoma species sequences. Taken together, these results support the use of these markers in studying the population dynamics of Schistosoma isolates from endemic areas and also provide new methods for investigating the relationships between different populations of parasites. In addition, these data also indicate that Schistosoma magrebowiei is not a sister taxon to Schistosoma mattheei, prompting a new designation to a basal clade.
Animals, DNA Fingerprinting, DNA, Helminth/genetics, Genotype, Microsatellite Repeats/genetics, Phylogeny, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid/genetics, Schistosoma/classification, Schistosoma mansoni/genetics
0074-0276
391-397
Bahia, Diana
b6ebe81a-b2db-4a7f-b836-13d78826cbcf
Rodrigues, Nilton B
e24d7fab-ed08-4071-8448-b1f6ead46643
Araújo, Flávio Marcos G
4dd5452b-1314-4a53-8db7-4d6da7bb33d8
Romanha, Alvaro José
6514c127-a99f-419e-b216-8100f81091f2
Ruiz, Jerônimo C
523a8a6a-0ab3-407e-b87f-d8676c7c0742
Johnston, David A
b41163c9-b9d2-425c-af99-2a357204014e
Oliveira, Guilherme
50efffe7-4d7b-421a-b5d7-80d899e164f2
Bahia, Diana
b6ebe81a-b2db-4a7f-b836-13d78826cbcf
Rodrigues, Nilton B
e24d7fab-ed08-4071-8448-b1f6ead46643
Araújo, Flávio Marcos G
4dd5452b-1314-4a53-8db7-4d6da7bb33d8
Romanha, Alvaro José
6514c127-a99f-419e-b216-8100f81091f2
Ruiz, Jerônimo C
523a8a6a-0ab3-407e-b87f-d8676c7c0742
Johnston, David A
b41163c9-b9d2-425c-af99-2a357204014e
Oliveira, Guilherme
50efffe7-4d7b-421a-b5d7-80d899e164f2

Bahia, Diana, Rodrigues, Nilton B, Araújo, Flávio Marcos G, Romanha, Alvaro José, Ruiz, Jerônimo C, Johnston, David A and Oliveira, Guilherme (2010) CA88, a nuclear repetitive DNA sequence identified in Schistosoma mansoni, aids in the genotyping of nine Schistosoma species of medical and veterinary importance. Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 105 (4), 391-397. (doi:10.1590/s0074-02762010000400008).

Record type: Article

Abstract

CA88 is the first long nuclear repetitive DNA sequence identified in the blood fluke, Schistosoma mansoni. The assembled S. mansoni sequence, which contains the CA88 repeat, has 8,887 nucleotides and at least three repeat units of approximately 360 bp. In addition, CA88 also possesses an internal CA microsatellite, identified as SmBr18. Both PCR and BLAST analysis have been used to analyse and confirm the CA88 sequence in other S. mansoni sequences in the public database. PCR-acquired nuclear repetitive DNA sequence profiles from nine Schistosoma species were used to classify this organism into four genotypes. Included among the nine species analysed were five sequences of both African and Asian lineages that are known to infect humans. Within these genotypes, three of them refer to recognised species groups. A panel of four microsatellite loci, including SmBr18 and three previously published loci, has been used to characterise the nine Schistosoma species. Each species has been identified and classified based on its CA88 DNA fingerprint profile. Furthermore, microsatellite sequences and intra-specific variation have also been observed within the nine Schistosoma species sequences. Taken together, these results support the use of these markers in studying the population dynamics of Schistosoma isolates from endemic areas and also provide new methods for investigating the relationships between different populations of parasites. In addition, these data also indicate that Schistosoma magrebowiei is not a sister taxon to Schistosoma mattheei, prompting a new designation to a basal clade.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 10 February 2010
Published date: 1 July 2010
Keywords: Animals, DNA Fingerprinting, DNA, Helminth/genetics, Genotype, Microsatellite Repeats/genetics, Phylogeny, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid/genetics, Schistosoma/classification, Schistosoma mansoni/genetics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 468897
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468897
ISSN: 0074-0276
PURE UUID: 9db53b90-a819-4958-aa60-05fc34efaf48
ORCID for David A Johnston: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6703-6014

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Date deposited: 31 Aug 2022 16:54
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:11

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Contributors

Author: Diana Bahia
Author: Nilton B Rodrigues
Author: Flávio Marcos G Araújo
Author: Alvaro José Romanha
Author: Jerônimo C Ruiz
Author: David A Johnston ORCID iD
Author: Guilherme Oliveira

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