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Zoonotic <i>Enterocytozoon bieneusi</i> genotypes in free-ranging and farmed wild ungulates in Spain

Alejandro Dashti, Mónica Santı́n, Pamela C. Köster, Begoña Bailo, Sheila Ortega, Elena Imaña, M. Habela, Antonio Rivero‐Juárez, Joaquín Vicente, WE&H group, Carles Conejero, Carlos González‐Crespo, Cristina Garrido, Diana Gassó, Diana Andrea Murillo, Emmanuel Serrano, Gregorio Mentaberre, Irene Torres‐Blas, Josep Estruch, Josep Pastor, Jorge Ramón Lopez‐Olvera, María Escobar-González, Marta Valldeperes, Montse Mesalles, Omar D. Lopez, Raquel Álvarez, Rafaela Cuenca, Roser Velarde, Santiago Lavı́n, María Cruz Arnal, Daniel Fernández de Luco, P. Morrondo, José A. Armenteros, Ana Balseiro, Guillermo A. Cardona, Carlos Martínez‐Carrasco, J A Ortíz, Rafael Calero‐Bernal, David Carmena, David González‐Barrio

2022Medical Mycology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Microsporidia comprises a diverse group of obligate, intracellular, and spore-forming parasites that infect a wide range of animals. Among them, Enterocytozoon bieneusi is the most frequently reported species in humans and other mammals and birds. Data on the epidemiology of E. bieneusi in wildlife are limited. Hence, E. bieneusi was investigated in eight wild ungulate species present in Spain (genera Ammotragus, Capra, Capreolus, Cervus, Dama, Ovis, Rupicapra, and Sus) by molecular methods. Faecal samples were collected from free-ranging (n = 1058) and farmed (n = 324) wild ungulates from five Spanish bioregions. The parasite was detected only in red deer (10.4%, 68/653) and wild boar (0.8%, 3/359). Enterocytozoon bieneusi infections were more common in farmed (19.4%, 63/324) than in wild (1.5%, 5/329) red deer. A total of 11 genotypes were identified in red deer, eight known (BEB6, BEB17, EbCar2, HLJD-V, MWC_d1, S5, Type IV, and Wildboar3) and three novel (DeerSpEb1, DeerSpEb2, and DeerSpEb3) genotypes. Mixed genotype infections were detected in 15.9% of farmed red deer. Two genotypes were identified in wild boar, a known (Wildboar3) and a novel (WildboarSpEb1) genotypes. All genotypes identified belonged to E. bieneusi zoonotic Groups 1 and 2. This study provides the most comprehensive epidemiological study of E. bieneusi in Spanish ungulates to date, representing the first evidence of the parasite in wild red deer populations worldwide. Spanish wild boars and red deer are reservoir of zoonotic genotypes of E. bieneusi and might play an underestimated role in the transmission of this microsporidian species to humans and other animals.

Topics & Concepts

Enterocytozoon bieneusiBiologyRoe deerCapreolusGenotypeWild boarZoonosisMicrosporidiosisVeterinary medicineUngulateZoologyMicrosporidiaVirologyEcologyMicrobiologySporeGeneBiochemistryHabitatMedicineParasitic Infections and DiagnosticsStudy of Mite SpeciesClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research