4.3 Article

Molecular characterization of Trichomonas gypaetinii isolated from the upper alimentary tract of Steller's sea eagles (Haliaeetus pelagicus) and white-tailed sea eagles (Haliaeetus albicilla) in Hokkaido, Japan

Journal

PARASITOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 120, Issue 6, Pages 2189-2198

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-021-07160-5

Keywords

Trichomonas gypaetinii; Haliaeetus; ITS; 18S ribosomal RNA; Phylogenetic analysis; Trophozoites

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Funding

  1. Akiyama Life Science Foundation

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This study investigated the prevalence of trichomonads in the upper alimentary tract of Steller's sea eagles and white-tailed sea eagles, detecting Trichomonas spp. genomic sequences through PCR and culture. Morphologic and molecular characterizations confirmed all isolates as T. gypaetinii, and novel gene sequences were provided. This is the first study to isolate T. gypaetinii from Haliaeetus eagles, showing that T. gypaetinii belong to independent clusters from other Trichomonas spp.
Recent phylogenetic and morphologic studies of Trichomonas spp. suggests that there are more than 3 species that infect the upper alimentary tract of wild birds, which include T. gallinae, T. stableri, and T. gypaetinii. In this study, investigations were conducted on the prevalence of trichomonads in the upper alimentary tract of 12 Steller's sea eagles (Haliaeetus pelagicus) and 18 white-tailed sea eagles (H. albicilla). All birds were rescued from the wild and kept at a rehabilitation facility in Hokkaido, Japan, for variable durations and did not show any symptoms of trichomonosis. The ITS1-5.8SrRNA-ITS2 (ITS) genomic region of Trichomonas spp. was detected from 29 samples by PCR, and flagellates were confirmed from 4 samples by culture. Morphologic observations and measurement recordings were conducted under a light microscope on trophozoites obtained from the cultured isolates. Genomic sequences of the ITS, 18S ribosomal RNA (18S rRNA), Fe-hydrogenase, and RNA polymerase II largest subunit (Rpb1) regions were determined by direct sequencing, and phylogenetic analyses were conducted with previously published sequences of Trichomonas spp. All isolates were concluded as T. gypaetinii based on morphologic and molecular characterizations of the ITS and 18S rRNA genes. This is the first study to isolate T. gypaetinii from Haliaeetus eagles and further provide novel sequences of the Fe-hydrogenase and Rpb1 genes of T. gypaetinii. Both genomic regions also confirmed that T. gypaetinii belong to independent clusters from other Trichomonas spp.

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