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"phylogenetic relationship"

Original Articles
Morphological Characteristics and Phylogenetic Trends of Trematode Cercariae in Freshwater Snails from Nakhon Nayok Province, Thailand
Thapana Chontananarth, Thanawan Tejangkura, Napat Wetchasart, Cherdchay Chimburut
Korean J Parasitol 2017;55(1):47-54.
Published online February 28, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2017.55.1.47
The prevalence of cercarial infection in freshwater snails and their evolutionary trends were studied in Nakhon Nayok province, Thailand. A total of 2,869 individual snails were examined for parasitic infections. The results showed that 12 snail species were found to host larval stages of trematodes with an overall prevalence of 4.7%. The infected specimens included 7 types at the cercarial stage; cercariae, megalurous cercariae, echinostome cercariae, furcocercous cercariae, parapleurolophocercous cercariae, virgulate cercariae, and xiphidiocercariae. Regarding molecular identification, ITS2 sequence data of each larval trematode were analyzed, and a dendrogram was constructed using the neighbor-joining method with 10,000 replicates. The dendrogram was separated into 6 clades (order/family), including Echinostomatida/Echinostomatidae, Echinostomatida/Philophthalmidae, Opisthorchiida/Heterophyidae, Plagiorchiida/Prosthogonimidae, Plagiorchiida/Lecithodendriidae, and Strigeatida/Cyathocotylidae. These findings were used to confirm morphological characteristics and evolutionary trends of each type of cercariae discovered in Nakhon Nayok province. Furthermore, this investigation confirmed that the ITS2 data of cercariae could be used to study on phylogenetic relationships or to determine classification of this species at order and/or family level when possible.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  Crossref logo
  • Ultrastructural and phylogenetic characterization of some trematode cercariae emerging from the freshwater ampullariid snail, Lanistes carinatus (Olivier, 1804)
    Mohammed E. El-Zeiny, Ahmed M. Ghoneim, Ola A. Abu Samak, Abdel Aziz A. Khidr
    Parasitology International.2025; 109: 103113.     CrossRef
  • Seasonal dynamics and molecular phylogenetic studies on cercariae in Central Zone of Kashmir valley
    Zahoor Ahmad Wani, Rafiq A. Shahardar, Kamal H. Bulbul, Idrees M. Allaie, Showkat A. Shah, Shabir A. Rather, Aiman Ashraf, Shahana Tramboo, Asif H. Khan, Shawky M Aboelhadid
    PLOS One.2025; 20(7): e0325160.     CrossRef
  • Isolation and molecular identification of liver fluke cercariae in freshwater snails of Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari province, Iran
    Bijan Hosseinpour Aghaei, Nadia Taiefi Nasrabadi, Yaser Pirali Kheirabadi, Seyed Shapoor Reza Shojaei
    Molluscan Research.2024; 44(1): 84.     CrossRef
  • Identification of freshwater snail species and survey of their trematode infections in Ordos, China
    Na Li, Bin Hou, Wurilige Tian, Siyao Li, Buhe Buyin, Ying Hai, Surong Hasi
    International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife.2024; 23: 100896.     CrossRef
  • Population genetic structure of Indoplanorbis exustus (Gastropoda: Planorbidae) in Thailand and its infection with trematode cercariae
    Abdulhakam Dumidae, Chanakan Subkrasae, Jiranun Ardpairin, Supawan Pansri, Raxsina Polseela, Aunchalee Thanwisai, Apichat Vitta, Marcello Otake Sato
    PLOS ONE.2024; 19(1): e0297761.     CrossRef
  • Zoonotic human liver flukes, a type 1 biocarcinogen, in freshwater fishes: genetic analysis and confirmation of molluscan vectors and reservoir hosts in Bangladesh
    Sharmin Shahid Labony, Md. Abdul Alim, Muhammad Mehedi Hasan, Md. Shahadat Hossain, Sharmin Akter, Joydeep Paul, Thahsin Farjana, Md. Haydar Ali, Mohammad Zahangir Alam, Takeshi Hatta, Hayato Kawada, Keiko Mizutani, Naotoshi Tsuji, Anisuzzaman
    Infectious Diseases of Poverty.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Infection status and species diversity of trematode cercariae in freshwater snails from canal networks in the Bangkok Metropolitan Region, Thailand
    Phuphitchan Rachprakhon, Watchariya Purivirojkul
    Parasites, Hosts and Diseases.2024; 62(4): 461.     CrossRef
  • Type of cercaria in freshwater snails at Tunggu Pampang Reservoir, Makassar City, Indonesia
    Arif Rahman Jabal, Dian Mutiasari, Hairil Akbar, M. Arfah, Marhani Marhani, Rini Rini, Nur Alam Sobak, Anggit Julianingsih Pisu, Agnes Immanuela Toemon, Arini Ratnasari
    Russian Journal of Infection and Immunity.2023; 12(4): 765.     CrossRef
  • Molluscicidal and cercaricidal effects of Persicaria senegalensis on Radix natalensis snails and their echinostome-shed cercariae in South Africa
    MC Mathole, PH King
    African Journal of Aquatic Science.2023; 48(1): 71.     CrossRef
  • Bulinus snails in the Lake Victoria Basin in Kenya: Systematics and their role as hosts for schistosomes
    Caitlin R. Babbitt, Martina R. Laidemitt, Martin W. Mutuku, Polycup O. Oraro, Sara V. Brant, Gerald M. Mkoji, Eric S. Loker, Brianna R. Beechler
    PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases.2023; 17(2): e0010752.     CrossRef
  • Morphological and molecular identification of lymnaeid snail and trematodes cercariae in different water bodies in Perak, Malaysia
    Nazir Ahmad Tookhy, Nur Mahiza Md Isa, Rozaihan Mansor, Yasmin Abd Rahaman, Nur Indah Ahmad, Dung Thi Bui, Lokman Hakim Idris, Noor Hazfalinda Hamzah, Norhadila Zulkifli
    Parasitology Research.2023; 122(7): 1475.     CrossRef
  • Morphological and molecular identification of trematode cercariae related with humans and animal health in freshwater snails from a lake and a dam in Myanmar
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    Parasitology Research.2022; 121(2): 653.     CrossRef
  • Economic losses, morpho-molecular identification, and identity of Fasciola species recovered from Egypt
    Omima Ramadan Abdel‑Fatah, Waleed M. Arafa, Ahmed Anwar Wahba, Khaled Mohamed El‑Dakhly
    Journal of Parasitic Diseases.2022; 46(4): 1036.     CrossRef
  • Assessment of schistosomiasis transmission in the River Nile at Greater Cairo using malacological surveys and cercariometry
    Hanaa M. M. El-Khayat, Hanan S. Mossalem, Karem El-Hommossany, Sara S. M. Sayed, Wafaa A. Mohammed, Khaled M. Zayed, Mohamed Saied, Mohamed R. Habib
    Journal of Parasitic Diseases.2022; 46(4): 1090.     CrossRef
  • Cercarial trematodes in freshwater snails from Bangkok, Thailand: prevalence, morphological and molecular studies and human parasite perspective
    Pichit Wiroonpan, Thapana Chontananarth, Watchariya Purivirojkul
    Parasitology.2021; 148(3): 366.     CrossRef
  • The prevalence of cercarial infection and development of a duplex PCR for detection of the cercarial stage of Haplorchis taichui and H. pumilio in first intermediate hosts from Chai Nat province, Thailand
    Chadaporn Dunghungzin, Thapana Chontananarth
    Acta Tropica.2021; 214: 105795.     CrossRef
  • Insights on foodborne zoonotic trematodes in freshwater snails in North and Central Vietnam
    Phuong Thi Xuan Nguyen, Hien Van Hoang, Huyen Thi Khanh Dinh, Pierre Dorny, Bertrand Losson, Dung Thi Bui, Laetitia Lempereur
    Parasitology Research.2021; 120(3): 949.     CrossRef
  • Characterization of the complete mitochondrial genome of Notocotylus sp. (Trematoda, Notocotylidae) and its phylogenetic implications
    Guoliang Xu, Peng Zhu, Weining Zhu, Bo Ma, Xiaoyun Li, Wei Li
    Parasitology Research.2021; 120(4): 1291.     CrossRef
  • Morphological and molecular assessment of the diversity of trematode communities in freshwater gastropods and bivalves in Los Tuxtlas tropical rainforest
    Y. Velázquez-Urrieta, G. Pérez-Ponce de León
    Journal of Helminthology.2021;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Five new morphological types of virgulate and microcotylous xiphidiocercariae based on morphological and molecular phylogenetic analyses
    S.V. Shchenkov, S.A. Denisova, G.A. Kremnev, A.A. Dobrovolskij
    Journal of Helminthology.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Molecular identification of morphologically similar microcercous cercariae of two trematode families, Paragonimidae and Troglotrematidae, concurrently found in the same snail species of the subfamily Triculinae
    Pham Ngoc Doanh, Hoang Van Hien, Bui Thi Dung
    Folia Parasitologica.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Helminth endoparasites of the smooth newtLissotriton vulgaris: linking morphological identification and molecular data
    U. Sinsch, P. Heneberg, M. Těšínský, C. Balczun, P. Scheid
    Journal of Helminthology.2019; 93(3): 332.     CrossRef
  • Trematode cercarial fauna obtained from the field-collected freshwater snails Lymnaea natalensis in Egypt
    Amina M. Ibrahim, Amira Kamal Ahmed
    Bulletin of the National Research Centre.2019;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Assessment of the molluscicidal impact of extracted chlorophyllin on some biochemical parameters in the nervous tissue and histological changes in Biomphalaria alexandrina and Lymnaea natalensis snails
    Amina M. Ibrahim, Fayez A. Bakry
    Invertebrate Neuroscience.2019;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Freshwater Snail Diversity in Mae Lao Agricultural Basin (Chiang Rai, Thailand) with a Focus on Larval Trematode Infections
    Kittichai Chantima, Krittawit Suk-ueng, Mintra Kampan
    The Korean Journal of Parasitology.2018; 56(3): 247.     CrossRef
  • The rapid detection method by polymerase chain reaction for minute intestinal trematodes: Haplorchis taichui in intermediate snail hosts based on 18s ribosomal DNA
    Thapana Chontananarth, Sothorn Anucherngchai, Thanawan Tejangkura
    Journal of Parasitic Diseases.2018; 42(3): 423.     CrossRef
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Molecular Markers for Identification of Stellantchasmus falcatus and a Phylogenic Study using the HAT-RAPD Method
Chalobol Wongsawad, Pheravut Wongsawad
Korean J Parasitol 2010;48(4):303-307.
Published online December 16, 2010
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2010.48.4.303

Stellantchasmus falcatus is a minute intestinal fluke in the family Heterophyidae. Metacercariae, the infective stage, were reported in a marine fish, mullet Liza subviridis, and a fresh water fish, Dermogenus pusillus, in Thailand. Adults were found in chicks, rats, cats, and humans. Morphological studies were done for comparing Stellantchasmus sp. worms found in 2 different fish hosts; their shapes and organ arrangements were very similar except for the prepharynx length. Therefore, the present study aimed to compare their DNA fingerprints using the HAT-RAPD method for both types of Stellantchasmus and several other related species. Ten arbitrarily selected primers (OPA-04, OPA-09, OPN-02, OPN-03, OPN-09, OPN-12, OPP-11, OPR-15, OPX-13, and OPAD-01) were used. It was found that OPA-09, OPN-03, and OPAD-01 were able to generate S. falcatus specific fragments in mullets which consisted of 200, 760, and 280 bp, respectively. In addition, the results of morphologic, DNA fingerprinting, and phylogenetic analyses strongly suggest that the fresh water and marine specimens of Stellantchamus may be different species.

Citations

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  • Phytotoxicity and genotoxicity study of reactive red 141 dye on mung bean (Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek) seedlings
    Chalermwoot Sompark, Somchit Damrianant, Niramol Sakkayawong
    Molecular Biology Reports.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Detection ofRaillietina saudiaefrom the domestic pigeon in Saudi Arabia through18Sand28S rDNAgenes
    S. Al‐Quraishy, R. Abdel‐Gaber, M.A. Dkhil, A.S. Abdel‐Baki, M. Alotaibi, W. Alhafidh, N. Al‐Houshany
    Letters in Applied Microbiology.2021; 72(1): 90.     CrossRef
  • Morphological and Molecular Characteristics of the Gastro-Intestinal Nematode Parasite Ascaridia columbae Infecting the Domestic Pigeon Columba livia domestica in Saudi Arabia
    Saleh Al Quraishy, Rewaida Abdel-Gaber, Mohamed A. Dkhil, Khulud Alzuabi
    Acta Parasitologica.2020; 65(1): 208.     CrossRef
  • Morphological and Molecular Identification of Stellantchasmus dermogenysi n. sp. (Digenea: Heterophyidae) in Thailand
    Chalobol Wongsawad, Nattawadee Nantarat, Pheravut Wongsawad, Preeyaporn Butboonchoo, Jong-Yil Chai
    The Korean Journal of Parasitology.2019; 57(3): 257.     CrossRef
  • Occurrence and HAT-RAPD analysis of gastrointestinal helminths in domestic chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) in Phayao province, northern Thailand
    Preeyaporn Butboonchoo, Chalobol Wongsawad
    Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences.2017; 24(1): 30.     CrossRef
  • Phylogenetic analysis reveals cryptic species diversity within minute intestinal fluke, Stellantchasmus falcatus Onji and Nishio, 1916 (Trematoda, Heterophyidae)
    Chalobol Wongsawad, Nattawadee Nantarat, Pheravut Wongsawad
    Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine.2017; 10(2): 165.     CrossRef
  • Fishborne zoonotic heterophyid infections: An update
    Jong-Yil Chai, Bong-Kwang Jung
    Food and Waterborne Parasitology.2017; 8-9: 33.     CrossRef
  • Epidemiological situation and molecular identification of cercarial stage in freshwater snails in Chao-Phraya Basin, Central Thailand
    Sothorn Anucherngchai, Thanawan Tejangkura, Thapana Chontananarth
    Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine.2016; 6(6): 539.     CrossRef
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    W. Phromthep
    Procedia Engineering.2012; 32: 1073.     CrossRef
  • Opisthorchis viverrini and Haplorchis taichui: Development of a multiplex PCR assay for their detection and differentiation using specific primers derived from HAT-RAPD
    Chalobol Wongsawad, Pheravut Wongsawad
    Experimental Parasitology.2012; 132(2): 237.     CrossRef
  • 8,555 View
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Divergent long-terminal-repeat retrotransposon families in the genome of Paragonimus westermani
Young-An Bae, Yoon Kong
Korean J Parasitol 2003;41(4):221-231.
Published online December 20, 2003
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2003.41.4.221

To gain information on retrotransposons in the genome of Paragonimus westermani, PCR was carried out with degenerate primers, specific to protease and reverse transcriptase (rt) genes of long-terminal-repeat (LTR) retrotransposons. The PCR products were cloned and sequenced, after which 12 different retrotransposon-related sequences were isolated from the trematode genome. These showed various degrees of identity to the polyprotein of divergent retrotransposon families. A phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that these sequences could be classified into three different families of LTR retrotransposons, namely, Xena, Bel, and Gypsy families. Of these, two mRNA transcripts were detected by reverse transcriptase-PCR, showing that these two elements preserved their mobile activities. The genomic distributions of these two sequences were found to be highly repetitive. These results suggest that there are diverse retrotransposons including the ancient Xena family in the genome of P. westermani, which may have been involved in the evolution of the host genome.

Citations

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  • Gene diversity and genetic variation in lung flukes (genusParagonimus)
    David Blair, Yukifumi Nawa, Makedonka Mitreva, Pham Ngoc Doanh
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  • PwRn1, a novel Ty3/gypsy-like retrotransposon of Paragonimus westermani: molecular characters and its differentially preserved mobile potential according to host chromosomal polyploidy
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    Claudia S. Copeland, Victoria H. Mann, Paul J. Brindley
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Phylogenetic relationships among Acanthamoeba spp. based on PCR-RFLP analyses of mitochondrial small subunit rRNA gene
Hak-Sun Yu, Mee-Yul Hwang, Tae-Ook Kim, Ho-Cheol Yun, Tae-Ho Kim, Hyun-Hee Kong, Dong-Il Chung
Korean J Parasitol 1999;37(3):181-188.
Published online September 30, 1999
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.1999.37.3.181

We investigated the value of mitochondrial small subunit rRNA gene (mt SSU rDNA) PCR-RFLP as a taxonomic tool for Acanthamoeba isolates with close interrelationships. Twenty-five isolates representing 20 species were included in the analysis. As in nuclear 18S rDNA analysis, two type strains (A. astronyxis and A. tubiashi) of morphological group 1 diverged earliest from the other strains, but the divergence between them was less than in 18S riboprinting. Acanthamoeba griffini of morphological group 2 branched between pathogenic (A. culbertsoni A-1 and A. healyi OC-3A) and nonpathogenic (A. palestinensis Reich, A. pustulosa GE-3a, A. royreba Oak Ridge, and A lenticulata PD2S) strains of morphological group 3. Among the remaining isolates of morphological group 2, the Chang strain had the identical mitochondrial riboprints as the type strain of A. hatchetti. AA2 and AA1, the type strains of A. divionensis and A. paradivionensis, respectively, had the identical riboprints as A. quina Vil3 and A. castellanii Ma. Although the branching orders of A. castellanii Neff, A. polyphaga P23, A. triangularis SH621, and A. lugdunensis L3a were different from those in 18S riboprinting analysis, the results obtained from this study generally coincided well with those from 18S riboprinting. Mitochondrial riboprinting may have an advantage over nuclear 18S rDNA riboprinting because the mt SSU rDNAs do not seem to have introns that are found in the 18S genes of Acanthamoeba and that distort phylogenetic analyses.

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