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Molecular Characterization of Giardia duodenalis in Children and Adults Sampled in Algeria

Salem Belkessa, Daniel Thomas‐López, Karim Houalı, Farida Ghalmi, Christen Rune Stensvold

2020Microorganisms19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The molecular epidemiology of giardiasis in Africa remains unclear. A study was carried out across four hospitals in Algeria. A total of 119 fecal samples from 55 children, 37 adults, and 27 individuals of undetermined age, all scored positive for intestinal parasites by microscopy, and were screened by real-time PCR for Giardia. Molecular characterization of Giardia was performed by assemblage-specific PCR and PCR targeting the triose phosphate isomerase gene (tpi). Of the 119 samples, 80 (67%) were Giardia-positive by real-time PCR. For 48 moderately-highly real-time PCR-positive samples, tpi genotyping assigned 22 samples to Assemblage A and 26 to Assemblage B. Contrary to Assemblage A, Assemblage B exhibited substantial genetic diversity and allelic heterozygosity. Assemblage-specific PCR proved to be specific for discriminating Assemblage A or B but not as sensitive as tpi genotyping. We confirmed that real-time PCR is more sensitive than microscopy for detecting Giardia in stool samples and that robust amplification and sequencing of the tpi gene is feasible when moderate-to-strongly real-time PCR-positive samples are used. This study is one of the few performed in Africa providing genotyping data on Giardia infections in humans. Both assemblages A and B were commonly seen and not associated with specific sociodemographic data.

Topics & Concepts

GiardiaGenotypingBiologyGiardia lambliaPolymerase chain reactionFecesLoss of heterozygositySubtypingAssemblage (archaeology)GenotypeMolecular epidemiologyGeneAlleleMicrobiologyGeneticsEcologyProgramming languageComputer scienceParasitic Infections and DiagnosticsAmoebic Infections and TreatmentsParasitic infections in humans and animals
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