Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2015)

Lagenidium giganteum Pathogenicity in Mammals

  • Raquel Vilela,
  • John W. Taylor,
  • Edward D. Walker,
  • Leonel Mendoza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2102.141091
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 2
pp. 290 – 297

Abstract

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Infections of mammals by species in the phylum Oomycota taxonomically and molecularly similar to known Lagenidium giganteum strains have increased. During 2013–2014, we conducted a phylogenetic study of 21 mammalian Lagenidium isolates; we found that 11 cannot be differentiated from L. giganteum strains that the US Environmental Protection Agency approved for biological control of mosquitoes; these strains were later unregistered and are no longer available. L. giganteum strains pathogenic to mammals formed a strongly supported clade with the biological control isolates, and both types experimentally infected mosquito larvae. However, the strains from mammals grew well at 25°C and 37°C, whereas the biological control strains developed normally at 25°C but poorly at higher temperatures. The emergence of heat-tolerant strains of L. giganteum pathogenic to lower animals and humans is of environmental and public health concern.

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