» Articles » PMID: 27041341

The Numbers Game: Quantitative Analysis of Neorickettsia Sp. Propagation Through Complex Life Cycle of Its Digenean Host Using Real-time QPCR

Overview
Journal Parasitol Res
Specialty Parasitology
Date 2016 Apr 5
PMID 27041341
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Bacteria of the genus Neorickettsia are obligate intracellular endosymbionts of parasitic flukes (Digenea) and are passed through the entire complex life cycle of the parasite by vertical transmission. Several species of Neorickettsia are known to cause diseases in domestic animals, wildlife, and humans. Quantitative data on the transmission of the bacteria through the digenean life cycle is almost completely lacking. This study quantified for the first time the abundance of Neorickettsia within multiple stages of the life cycle of the digenean Plagiorchis elegans. Snails Lymnaea stagnalis collected from a pond in North Dakota were screened for the presence of digenean cercariae, which were subsequently tested for the presence of Neorickettsia. Three L. stagnalis were found shedding P. elegans cercariae infected with Neorickettsia. These snails were used to initiate three separate laboratory life cycles and obtain all life cycle stages for bacterial quantification. A quantitative real-time PCR assay targeting the GroEL gene was developed to enumerate Neorickettsia sp. within different stages of the digenean life cycle. The number of bacteria significantly increased throughout all stages, from eggs to adults. The two largest increases in number of bacteria occurred during the period from eggs to cercariae and from 6-day metacercariae to 48-h juvenile worms. These two periods seem to be the most important for Neorickettsia propagation through the complex digenean life cycle and maturation in the definitive host.

Citing Articles

Adoption of alternative life cycles in a parasitic trematode is linked to microbiome differences.

Salloum P, Jorge F, Dheilly N, Poulin R Biol Lett. 2023; 19(6):20230091.

PMID: 37282491 PMC: 10244958. DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2023.0091.


Consistency of Bacterial Communities in a Parasitic Worm: Variation Throughout the Life Cycle and Across Geographic Space.

Jorge F, Dheilly N, Froissard C, Wainwright E, Poulin R Microb Ecol. 2021; 83(3):724-738.

PMID: 34136952 DOI: 10.1007/s00248-021-01774-z.


Persistence of a Core Microbiome Through the Ontogeny of a Multi-Host Parasite.

Jorge F, Dheilly N, Poulin R Front Microbiol. 2020; 11:954.

PMID: 32508779 PMC: 7248275. DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00954.


Ultrastructure and localization of Neorickettsia in adult digenean trematodes provides novel insights into helminth-endobacteria interaction.

Fischer K, Tkach V, Curtis K, Fischer P Parasit Vectors. 2017; 10(1):177.

PMID: 28407790 PMC: 5390476. DOI: 10.1186/s13071-017-2123-7.

References
1.
Mott J, Muramatsu Y, Seaton E, Martin C, Reed S, Rikihisa Y . Molecular analysis of Neorickettsia risticii in adult aquatic insects in Pennsylvania, in horses infected by ingestion of insects, and isolated in cell culture. J Clin Microbiol. 2002; 40(2):690-3. PMC: 153368. DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.2.690-693.2002. View

2.
Greiman S, Rikihisa Y, Cain J, Vaughan J, Tkach V . Germs within Worms: Localization of Neorickettsia sp. within Life Cycle Stages of the Digenean Plagiorchis elegans. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2016; 82(8):2356-2362. PMC: 4959474. DOI: 10.1128/AEM.04098-15. View

3.
Goyal K, Qamra R, Mande S . Multiple gene duplication and rapid evolution in the groEL gene: functional implications. J Mol Evol. 2006; 63(6):781-7. DOI: 10.1007/s00239-006-0037-7. View

4.
Dittrich S, Phuklia W, Turner G, Rattanavong S, Chansamouth V, Dumler S . Neorickettsia sennetsu as a Neglected Cause of Fever in South-East Asia. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2015; 9(7):e0003908. PMC: 4497638. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003908. View

5.
Greiman S, Tkach M, Vaughan J, Tkach V . Laboratory maintenance of the bacterial endosymbiont, Neorickettsia sp., through the life cycle of a digenean, Plagiorchis elegans. Exp Parasitol. 2015; 157:78-83. PMC: 4729577. DOI: 10.1016/j.exppara.2015.06.015. View