Echinococcus equinus, Williams & Sweatman, 1963

Wassermann, Marion, Aschenborn, Ortwin, Aschenborn, Julia, Mackenstedt, Ute & Romig, Thomas, 2015, A sylvatic lifecycle of Echinococcus equinus in the Etosha National Park, Namibia, International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife 4 (1), pp. 97-103 : 100

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.ijppaw.2014.12.002

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B8878C-6B61-FFE3-FF83-FB007156FAC3

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Echinococcus equinus
status

 

3.3. Phylogenetic and haplotype analyses of Echinococcus equinus

Comparative analysis of the E. equinus sequences (nad1 and cox1 genes) showed only a small number of polymorphic sites. Five haplotypes could be identified within the 894 bp long sequence of the complete nad1 gene of the Namibian samples (submitted to GenBank under accession numbers KP161211–KP161216). A sixth haplotype was represented by the horse samples from Italy, whereas the German haplotype (and the sequence of the UK reference) was also present among our Namibian samples. The 1608 bp long cox1 gene showed less variance with only 4 haplotypes (accession numbers KP161207–KP161210), including the Italian and German isolates ( Tables 2 and 3, Fig. 2 View Fig ). Cox1 and nad1 haplotypes showed a high degree of correlation, so the combination of both did not result in a drastic increase of haplotype numbers (six variants from Namibia and one additional from each Italy and UK) ( Table 2). The combined (concatenated) haplotype sequences were used for the phylogenetic ML analysis ( Fig. 3 View Fig ).

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