Emerging Infectious Diseases (Sep 2024)

Autochthonous Leishmaniasis Caused by Leishmania tropica, Identified by Using Whole-Genome Sequencing, Sri Lanka

  • Hermali Silva,
  • Tiago R. Ferreira,
  • Kajan Muneeswaran,
  • Sumudu R. Samarasinghe,
  • Eliza V.C. Alves-Ferreira,
  • Michael E. Grigg,
  • Naduviladath V. Chandrasekharan,
  • David L. Sacks,
  • Nadira D. Karunaweera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3009.231238
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 9
pp. 1872 – 1883

Abstract

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Cutaneous leishmaniasis is atypical in Sri Lanka because Leishmania donovani, which typically causes visceral disease, is the causative agent. The origins of recently described hybrids between L. donovani and other Leishmania spp. usually responsible for cutaneous leishmaniasis remain unknown. Other endemic dermotropic Leishmania spp. have not been reported in Sri Lanka. Genome analysis of 27 clinical isolates from Sri Lanka and 32 Old World Leishmania spp. strains found 8 patient isolates clustered with L. tropica and 19 with L. donovani. The L. tropica isolates from Sri Lanka shared markers with strain LtK26 reported decades ago in India, indicating they were not products of recent interspecies hybridization. Because L. tropica was isolated from patients with leishmaniasis in Sri Lanka, our findings indicate L. donovani is not the only cause of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Sri Lanka and potentially explains a haplotype that led to interspecies dermotropic L. donovani hybrids.

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