Multilocus Genotypic Analysis of <i>Cryptosporidium parvum</i> Isolates from Different Hosts and Geographical Origins

Furio Spano(Sapienza University of Rome), Lorenza Putignani(Sapienza University of Rome), Andrea Crisanti(Imperial College London), Pina Sallicandro(Istituto Superiore di Sanità), Una M. Morgan(Murdoch University), Sylvie M. Le Blancq(Columbia University), Laurie Tchack(Tufts University), Saul Tzipori(Tufts University), Giovanni Widmer(Tufts University)
Journal of Clinical Microbiology
November 1, 1998
Cited by 128Open Access
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Abstract

The genetic analysis of oocysts recovered from the stools of humans and animals infected with Cryptosporidium parvum has consistently shown the existence of two distinct genotypes. One of the genotypes is found exclusively in some human infections, whereas the other genotype is found in human as well as in animal infections. On the basis of these observations and the results of published epidemiological studies with single polymorphic markers, the existence of two separate transmission cycles has been postulated, one exclusively anthroponotic and the other involving both animals and humans. To test this hypothesis, C. parvum isolates of different geographic and host origins were analyzed by using unlinked genetic polymorphisms. A total of 28 isolates originating from Europe, North and South America, and Australia were examined. Isolates clustered into two groups, one comprising both human and animal isolates and the other comprising isolates only of human origin. The absence of recombinant genotypes is consistent with two reproductively isolated populations within the species C. parvum.


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