Seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern Thailand
© 2020 by the authors. The transmission of zoonotic filarial parasites by black flies has so far been reported in the Chiang Mai and Tak provinces, Thailand, and the bites of these infected black flies can cause a rare disease—human zoonotic onchocerciasis. However, species identification of the fil...
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th-cmuir.6653943832-702292020-10-14T08:42:25Z Seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern Thailand Kittipat Aupalee Atiporn Saeung Wichai Srisuka Masako Fukuda Adrian Streit Hiroyuki Takaoka Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Immunology and Microbiology Medicine © 2020 by the authors. The transmission of zoonotic filarial parasites by black flies has so far been reported in the Chiang Mai and Tak provinces, Thailand, and the bites of these infected black flies can cause a rare disease—human zoonotic onchocerciasis. However, species identification of the filarial parasites and their black fly vectors in the Chiang Mai province were previously only based on a morphotaxonomic analysis. In this study, a combined approach of morphotaxonomic and molecular analyses (mitochondrial cox1, 12S rRNA, and nuclear 18S rRNA (SSU HVR-I) genes) was used to clarify the natural filarial infections in female black flies collected by using human and swine baits from two study areas (Ban Lek and Ban Pang Dang) in the Chiang Mai province from March 2018 to January 2019. A total of 805 and 4597 adult females, belonging to seven and nine black fly taxa, were collected from Ban Lek and Ban Pang Dang, respectively. At Ban Lek, four of the 309 adult females of Simulium nigrogilvum were positive for Onchocerca species type I in the hot and rainy seasons. At Ban Pang Dang, five unknown filarial larvae (belonging to the same new species) were detected in Simulium sp. in the S. varicorne species-group and in three species in the S. asakoae species-group in all seasons, and three non-filarial larvae of three different taxa were also found in three females of the S. asakoae species-group. This study is the first to molecularly identify new filarial species and their vector black fly species in Thailand. 2020-10-14T08:25:54Z 2020-10-14T08:25:54Z 2020-06-01 Journal 20760817 2-s2.0-85087297690 10.3390/pathogens9060512 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85087297690&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/70229 |
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Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Immunology and Microbiology Medicine Kittipat Aupalee Atiporn Saeung Wichai Srisuka Masako Fukuda Adrian Streit Hiroyuki Takaoka Seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern Thailand |
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© 2020 by the authors. The transmission of zoonotic filarial parasites by black flies has so far been reported in the Chiang Mai and Tak provinces, Thailand, and the bites of these infected black flies can cause a rare disease—human zoonotic onchocerciasis. However, species identification of the filarial parasites and their black fly vectors in the Chiang Mai province were previously only based on a morphotaxonomic analysis. In this study, a combined approach of morphotaxonomic and molecular analyses (mitochondrial cox1, 12S rRNA, and nuclear 18S rRNA (SSU HVR-I) genes) was used to clarify the natural filarial infections in female black flies collected by using human and swine baits from two study areas (Ban Lek and Ban Pang Dang) in the Chiang Mai province from March 2018 to January 2019. A total of 805 and 4597 adult females, belonging to seven and nine black fly taxa, were collected from Ban Lek and Ban Pang Dang, respectively. At Ban Lek, four of the 309 adult females of Simulium nigrogilvum were positive for Onchocerca species type I in the hot and rainy seasons. At Ban Pang Dang, five unknown filarial larvae (belonging to the same new species) were detected in Simulium sp. in the S. varicorne species-group and in three species in the S. asakoae species-group in all seasons, and three non-filarial larvae of three different taxa were also found in three females of the S. asakoae species-group. This study is the first to molecularly identify new filarial species and their vector black fly species in Thailand. |
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Journal |
author |
Kittipat Aupalee Atiporn Saeung Wichai Srisuka Masako Fukuda Adrian Streit Hiroyuki Takaoka |
author_facet |
Kittipat Aupalee Atiporn Saeung Wichai Srisuka Masako Fukuda Adrian Streit Hiroyuki Takaoka |
author_sort |
Kittipat Aupalee |
title |
Seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern Thailand |
title_short |
Seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern Thailand |
title_full |
Seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern Thailand |
title_fullStr |
Seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern Thailand |
title_full_unstemmed |
Seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern Thailand |
title_sort |
seasonal filarial infections and their black fly vectors in chiang mai province, northern thailand |
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2020 |
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85087297690&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/70229 |
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