Molecular Typing of Giardia lamblia in Humans and Dogs and Evidence for Sexual Recombination

Giardia lamblia is a eukaryotic parasite that causes diarrhea in humans worldwide. Diarrheal diseases cause stunting and mental retardation in children in developing nations, therefore it is important to understand the molecular epidemiology of G. lamblia. Compounding this, it is not clear if comp...

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Main Author: Cooper, Margarethe
Other Authors: Sterling, Charles R
Language:EN
Published: The University of Arizona. 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195546
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1955462015-10-23T04:42:49Z Molecular Typing of Giardia lamblia in Humans and Dogs and Evidence for Sexual Recombination Cooper, Margarethe Sterling, Charles R Sterling, Charles R. Adam, Rodney D. Joens, Lynn Wolk, Donna Jost, B. Helen Giardia zoonotic transmission sexual recombination subtyping genotyping molecular typing Giardia lamblia is a eukaryotic parasite that causes diarrhea in humans worldwide. Diarrheal diseases cause stunting and mental retardation in children in developing nations, therefore it is important to understand the molecular epidemiology of G. lamblia. Compounding this, it is not clear if companion animals such as dogs contribute to infections in humans through zoonotic transmission. The genotypes of G. lamblia that have been found in humans are A1, A2 and B, while those in dogs have been on rare occasions all three human genotypes, but largely C and D, which have only been reported in dogs and appear to be species-specific. The molecular epidemiology of G. lamblia in humans and dogs was assessed in an endemic region of Lima, Peru. With one exception, dogs were found to harbor the C and D dog genotypes of G. lamblia. A single family dog was found to harbor a human genotype of G. lamblia. A2 and B genotypes of G. lamblia, but not A1, were found in humans in the endemic region. Previous literature reported that A2 and B typing within genotype tools were available, however the A2 samples from the endemic region could not be distinguished from one another through nucleotide polymorphism sequence analysis. A molecular typing technique was developed to type A2 samples. The extensive sequence analysis performed on two chromosomes of G. lamblia, yielded different phylogenetic tree groupings for the same samples. This lead to algorithmic analysis, which demonstrated a significantly high probability that meiotic recombination is occurring in the A2 samples of G. lamblia. As G. lamblia is largely believed to be asexual, the conclusion of doctoral research performed in this study yielded controversial, yet significant evidence that sex in G. lamblia A2 genotype samples is indeed occurring. 2006 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195546 659747552 1787 EN Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Giardia
zoonotic transmission
sexual recombination
subtyping
genotyping
molecular typing
spellingShingle Giardia
zoonotic transmission
sexual recombination
subtyping
genotyping
molecular typing
Cooper, Margarethe
Molecular Typing of Giardia lamblia in Humans and Dogs and Evidence for Sexual Recombination
description Giardia lamblia is a eukaryotic parasite that causes diarrhea in humans worldwide. Diarrheal diseases cause stunting and mental retardation in children in developing nations, therefore it is important to understand the molecular epidemiology of G. lamblia. Compounding this, it is not clear if companion animals such as dogs contribute to infections in humans through zoonotic transmission. The genotypes of G. lamblia that have been found in humans are A1, A2 and B, while those in dogs have been on rare occasions all three human genotypes, but largely C and D, which have only been reported in dogs and appear to be species-specific. The molecular epidemiology of G. lamblia in humans and dogs was assessed in an endemic region of Lima, Peru. With one exception, dogs were found to harbor the C and D dog genotypes of G. lamblia. A single family dog was found to harbor a human genotype of G. lamblia. A2 and B genotypes of G. lamblia, but not A1, were found in humans in the endemic region. Previous literature reported that A2 and B typing within genotype tools were available, however the A2 samples from the endemic region could not be distinguished from one another through nucleotide polymorphism sequence analysis. A molecular typing technique was developed to type A2 samples. The extensive sequence analysis performed on two chromosomes of G. lamblia, yielded different phylogenetic tree groupings for the same samples. This lead to algorithmic analysis, which demonstrated a significantly high probability that meiotic recombination is occurring in the A2 samples of G. lamblia. As G. lamblia is largely believed to be asexual, the conclusion of doctoral research performed in this study yielded controversial, yet significant evidence that sex in G. lamblia A2 genotype samples is indeed occurring.
author2 Sterling, Charles R
author_facet Sterling, Charles R
Cooper, Margarethe
author Cooper, Margarethe
author_sort Cooper, Margarethe
title Molecular Typing of Giardia lamblia in Humans and Dogs and Evidence for Sexual Recombination
title_short Molecular Typing of Giardia lamblia in Humans and Dogs and Evidence for Sexual Recombination
title_full Molecular Typing of Giardia lamblia in Humans and Dogs and Evidence for Sexual Recombination
title_fullStr Molecular Typing of Giardia lamblia in Humans and Dogs and Evidence for Sexual Recombination
title_full_unstemmed Molecular Typing of Giardia lamblia in Humans and Dogs and Evidence for Sexual Recombination
title_sort molecular typing of giardia lamblia in humans and dogs and evidence for sexual recombination
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/195546
work_keys_str_mv AT coopermargarethe moleculartypingofgiardialambliainhumansanddogsandevidenceforsexualrecombination
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