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Molecular approaches for a better understanding of the epidemiology and population genetics of Leishmania

Journal

PARASITOLOGY
Volume 138, Issue 4, Pages 405-425

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0031182010001538

Keywords

Leishmania; molecular markers; phylogeny; population genetics; multilocus sequence typing; multilocus microsatellite typing

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Funding

  1. EC [01810 Leishmania genotyping, 015407 LeishEpiNetSA]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [Scho 448/6-1-3, Scho 448/8-1]
  3. Deutsche Akademische Austauschdienst

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Molecular approaches are being used increasingly for epidemiological studies of visceral and cutaneous leishmaniases. Several molecular markers resolving genetic differences between Leishmania parasites at species and strain levels have been developed to address key epidemiological and population genetic questions. The current gold standard, multilocus enzyme typing (MLEE), needs cultured parasites and lacks discriminatory power. PCR assays identifying species directly with clinical samples have proven useful in numerous field studies. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) is potentially the most powerful phylogenetic approach and will, most probably, replace MLEE in the future. Multilocus microsatellite typing (MLMT) is able to discriminate below the zymodeme level and seems to be the best candidate for becoming the gold standard for distinction of strains. Population genetic studies by MLMT revealed geographical and hierarchic population structure in L. tropica, L. major and the L. donovani complex. The existence of hybrids and gene flow between Leishmania populations suggests that sexual recombination is more frequent than previously thought. However, typing and analytical tools need to be further improved. Accessible databases should be created and sustained for integrating data obtained by different researchers. This would allow for global analyses and help to avoid biases in analyses due to small sample sizes.

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