Life (Oct 2022)

Molecular and Morphological Characterization of <i>Eimeria crandallis</i> Isolated from Deer (<i>Cervidae</i>) in Different Captive Animals

  • Mian Abdul Hafeez,
  • Adeel Sattar,
  • Kiran Khalid,
  • Abdur Rauf Khalid,
  • Muhammad Shahid Mahmood,
  • Muhammad Tahir Aleem,
  • Kamran Ashraf,
  • Faiza Aslam,
  • Abdulaziz Alouffi,
  • Aymen Mohammed,
  • Mashal M. Almutairi,
  • Muhammad Ikram ul Haq

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12101621
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 1621

Abstract

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Coccidiosis is a protozoan disease that is characterized by diffuse diarrhea, dehydration, emaciation accompanied by moderate morbidity and mild mortality in animals and birds. The current study targeted the molecular characterization of Eimeria isolates in captive deer from different localities in Lahore. The host species was the Cervidae family, such as Hog deer (Axis porcinus) and Punjab urial (Ovis aries vignei). The Eimeria crandallis was isolated from zoo animals. The DNA was extracted from oocysts and amplified by using reported oligonucleotide primers that exhibited the 809 bp product. These were analyzed by using the small subunit 18S rRNA gene-based evolutionary relationship with 36 other Eimeria species reported in caprine, cervinae, bovines, avians, and rodents. Light microscopic examination exhibited 3.29% (7/213) Eimeria-positive fecal samples with morphological features, including sub-spherical forms, the presence of micropyle with polar cap, and oocysts diameters (μm) ranging from 24.32 ± 1.61 to 18.94 ± 1.51. The phylogenetic tree constitutes four distinct clusters with relatively higher values. The evolutionary network showed that sequences were clustered in the monophyletic group of Eimeria species reported in caprine and cervinae. The nucleotide and amino acid sequence similarity matrix analysis exhibited 99.5–99.9% identity of the study isolates with Eimeria crandallis (AF336339). This study provides relevant baseline data to develop strategic control measures for coccidiosis in zoo animals. However, further investigations are required to place the hog deer and Punjab urial-derived E. crandallis into the caprine-originated cluster.

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