1. Morphological and molecular description of Sarcocystis ratti n. sp. from the black rat (Rattus rattus) in Latvia
- Author
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Eglė Rudaitytė-Lukošienė, Viktorija Kirillova, Inese Gavarāne, Muza Kirjušina, Evita Grāvele, Dalius Butkauskas, and Petras Prakas
- Subjects
Sarcocystosis ,Brown rat ,030231 tropical medicine ,Zoology ,DNA, Ribosomal ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,030308 mycology & parasitology ,Rodent Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Phylogenetics ,parasitic diseases ,RNA, Ribosomal, 18S ,Animals ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Phylogeny ,0303 health sciences ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Ground substance ,Sarcocystis ,General Medicine ,Ribosomal RNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Latvia ,Sarcocystis species ,Rats ,Infectious Diseases ,Black rat ,Insect Science ,Parasitology - Abstract
Rodents have been widely studied as intermediate hosts of Sarcocystis; however, only a few reports on these parasites in the black rat (Rattus rattus) are known. Having examined 13 black rats captured in Latvia, sarcocysts were found in skeletal muscles of two mammals and were described as Sarcocystis ratti n. sp. Under a light microscope, sarcocysts were ribbon-shaped, 0.9–1.3 × 0.09–0.14 mm in size and had a thin (0.8–1.3 μm) and smooth cyst wall. The lancet-shaped bradyzoites were 8.3 × 4.3 (7.5–9.3 × 3.9–4.8) μm. Under a transmission electron microscope, the cyst wall was up to 1.3 μm thick, wavy, the ground substance appeared smooth, type 1a-like. Morphologically, sarcocysts of S. ratti were somewhat similar to those of S. cymruensis, S. rodentifelis, and S. dispersa-like previously identified in the brown rat (Rattus norvegicus). On the basis of 18S rDNA, 28S rDNA, and cox1, significant genetic differences (at least 2.3, 4.5, and 5.8%, respectively) were observed when comparing S. ratti with other Sarcocystis species using rodents as intermediate hosts. While ITS1 sequences of S. ratti were highly distinct from other Sarcocystis species available in GenBank. Phylogenetic and ecological data suggest that predatory mammals living near households are definitive hosts of S. ratti.
- Published
- 2019