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Morphological and Biochemical Correlates in the Characterization of Sarcocystis spp. 1
Author(s) -
O'DONOGHUE P. J.,
ADAMS M.,
DIXON B. R.,
FORD G. E.,
BAVERSTOCK P. R.
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
the journal of protozoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.067
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1550-7408
pISSN - 0022-3921
DOI - 10.1111/j.1550-7408.1986.tb05569.x
Subject(s) - biology , sarcocystis , cyst , isozyme , electrophoresis , genetic divergence , zoology , genetics , genetic diversity , pathology , enzyme , parasite hosting , biochemistry , medicine , population , demography , sociology , world wide web , computer science
ABSTRACT. Isoenzyme electrophoretic techniques were applied to the characterization of seven Sarcocystis spp. that had been identified by conventional morphological studies. Cystozoites were harvested from macroscopic cysts from sheep, cattle, and mice and from microscopic cysts from sheep, cattle, and goats. Soluble cystozoite extracts were subjected to cellulose acetate gel electrophoresis and characterized at 15 of the 39 enzyme loci examined. Genetic relationships among isolates were examined by simple phenetic clustering. Two different morphological types of macroscopic cysts from sheep, identified as S. gigantea (syn. S. ovifelis ) and S. medusiformis , consistently differed at 40% of the loci examined. Such genetic divergence confirms their separate morphotypic classification. Both differed from microscopic cyst isolates from sheep at 87% of the loci examined; however, two different morphotypes of microscopic cysts were found in the sheep sampled (thick‐walled and thin‐walled cysts). Until sufficient numbers of each type can be isolated and examined separately, both were regarded as belonging to the species S. tenella (syn. S. ovicanis ). Macroscopic and microscopic cysts from cattle consistently differed at 80% of the loci thereby supporting their separate classification as S. hirsuta (syn. S. bovifelis ) and S. cruzi (syn. S. bovicanis ), respectively. Isolates from goats (microscopic cysts identified as S. capracanis ) differed from S. tenella and S. cruzi at 20% and 47% of the loci, respectively. All macroscopic cyst isolates from the various host animal species (including S. muris from mice) differed from each other at nearly all loci. Isoenzyme electrophoretic techniques therefore provided genetic evidence supporting the classification of these various Sarcocystis spp. by their morphological characteristics.