Paragonimosis is an important food-borne zoonosis especially in Asian countries. Among Paragonimus species, Paragonimus westermani followed by P. skrjabini complex are the major pathogens for human paragonimosis in Asia. In addition, P. heterotremus is an important pathogen in southern China and the Indochina Peninsula and is the only proven species to cause human paragonimosis in Vietnam. During a recent survey in Yenbai Province in northern Vietnam, we found small and large types of Paragonimus metacercariae often concurrently in mountainous crabs, Potamiscus tannanti. Adult worms from those small and large metacercariae were obtained separately by experimental infection in dogs and cats. Morphological and molecular phylogenetic study based on sequences of ITS2 and a part of CO1 genes were performed for the identification of small and large metacercariae and their adults. The results showed that small metacercariae and their adults are completely identical with P. heterotremus in morphology and molecular genetic profiles. In contrast, large metacercariae and their adults have some morphological similarities with P. skrjabini and P. harinasutai, but are unidentifiable from each other by morphology alone. Molecular phylogenetic tree analyses on ITS2 and CO1 genes revealed that large metacercariae and their adults were grouped in the same clade and different from any known Paragonimus species. Although they share the same ancestor with P. skrjabini complex, their genetic distance was considerably different from two other known subspecies, P. skrjabini skrjabini and P. skrjabini miyazakii. Our results provide a new insight on the phylogeny of the genus Paragonimus.
During an epidemiological survey for Paragonimus and paragonimosis in northern Vietnam, we found extremely large excysted metacercariae (2.50 +/- 0.14 mm in length and 0.72 +/- 0.08 mm in width; mean +/- standard deviation of 20 samples) in mountainous crabs, Potamiscus mieni. Adult worms were successfully obtained by intraperitoneal injection with those large excysted metacercariae in a cat. Morphological and morphometric data of those large excysted metacercariae and the adult worms derived from them are identical to those of Paragonimus proliferus found in Yunnan province, China. However, when second internal transcribed spacer region and cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 gene sequences of those metacercariae and adult worms were compared with those of known Paragonimus spp. deposited in the GenBank, they were almost completely identical to those of Paragonimus hokuoensis metacercariae in China, of which adult worms have never been reported. This is the first record of P. proliferus in Vietnam and the first record from outside of China. Phylogenetic relationship between P. proliferus and P. hokuoensis is discussed.
Based on morphology of metacercariae and adult worms together with molecular data from our previous study, we describe herein a new lung fluke species named Paragonimus vietnamensis sp. nov. Metacercariae of this new species is round and extremely large in size (nearly 800 mum in diameter) having a fragile outer cyst of variable thickness and a thin fragile inner cyst. There are little or no space between metacercaria and the inner cyst wall. These and other morphological features of metacercariae of P. vietnamensis sp. nov. are not completely identical with but have some similarities with those of P. microrchis, P. proliferus, or P. menglaensis. On the other hand, adult worms obtained by experimental infection of these large metacercariae are oval in shape, having a ventral sucker slightly larger than the oral one, and having singly arranged relatively short cuticular spines. These morphological features of adult worms are partly similar to but not identical with those of P. microrchis, P. skrjabini, P. yunnanenis, P. xiangshanensis, or P. harinasutai. Taken these morphological data and our previous molecular phylogenetic analyses of ITS2 and CO1 sequences of metacercariae and adult worms together, P. vietnamensis sp. nov. is different from any other known Paragonimus spp.
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