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<i>Echinostoma mekongi</i>: Discovery of Its Metacercarial Stage in Snails, <i>Filopaludina martensi cambodjensis</i>, in Pursat Province, Cambodiaopen access

Authors
Chai, Jong-YilSohn, Woon-MokCho, JaeeunJung, Bong-KwangChang, TaeheeLee, Keon HoonKhieu, VirakHuy, Rekol
Issue Date
Feb-2021
Publisher
KOREAN SOC PARASITOLOGY, SEOUL NATL UNIV COLL MEDI
Keywords
Echinostoma mekongi; metacercaria; Filopaludina martensi cambodjensis snail; Pursat Province; Cambodia
Citation
KOREAN JOURNAL OF PARASITOLOGY, v.59, no.1, pp 47 - 53
Pages
7
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
KOREAN JOURNAL OF PARASITOLOGY
Volume
59
Number
1
Start Page
47
End Page
53
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/72759
DOI
10.3347/kjp.2021.59.1.47
ISSN
0023-4001
1738-0006
Abstract
Echinostoma mekongi was reported as a new species in 2020 based on specimens collected from humans in Kratie and Takeo Province, Cambodia. In the present study, its metacercarial stage has been discovered in Filopaludina martensi cambodjensis snails purchased from a local market nearby the Tonle Sap Lake, Pursat Province, Cambodia. The metacercariae were fed orally to an experimental hamster, and adult flukes were recovered at day 20 post-infection. They were morphologically examined using light and scanning electron microscopes and molecularly analyzed by sequencing of their mitochondrial cox1 and nad1 genes. A total of 115 metacercariae (1-8 per snail) were detected in 60 (60.0%) out of 100 Filopaludina snails examined. The metacercariae were round, 174 mu m in average diameter (163-190 mu m in range), having a thin cyst wall, a head collar armed with 37 collar spines, and characteristic excretory granules. The adult flukes were elongated, ventrally curved, 7.3 (6.4-8.2)x 1.4 (1.1-1.7) mm in size, and equipped with 37 collar spines on the head collar (dorsal spines in 2 alternating rows), being consistent with E. mekongi. In phylogenetic analyses, the adult flukes showed 99.0-100% homology based on cox) sequences and 98.9-99.7% homology based on nad1 sequences with E. mekongi. The results evidenced that F. martensi cambodjensis snails act as the second intermediate host of E. mekongi, and hamsters can be used as a suitable experimental definitive host. As local people favor to eat undercooked snails, these snails seem to be an important source of human infection with E. mekongi in Cambodia.
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