1. Helicosporidium sp. infection in a California kingsnake ( Lampropeltis californiae ): Spillover of a pathogen of invertebrates to a vertebrate host.
- Author
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Asin J, Childress AL, Dervas E, Garner MM, Uzal FA, Wellehan JFX Jr, Henderson EE, and Armien AG
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Chlorophyta, Invertebrates parasitology, Liver pathology, Liver parasitology, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Helicosporidium is a genus of nonphotosynthetic, green algae in the family Chlorellaceae , closely related to Prototheca . It is a known pathogen of invertebrates, and its occurrence in vertebrates has not been documented. A captive, 10-month-old, male, albino California kingsnake ( Lampropeltis californiae ) was submitted for necropsy. Gross examination revealed hemorrhagic laryngitis and a red mottled liver. Histologically, intravascular, intramonocytic/macrophagic and extracellular, eukaryotic organisms were observed in all tissues. These organisms stained positive with Grocott-Gomori methenamine silver and periodic acid-Schiff and were variably acid-fast and gram-positive. Ultrastructural analysis revealed approximately 4 µm vegetative multiplication forms and cysts with 3 parallel ovoid cells and a helically coiled filamentous cell. A polymerase chain reaction with primers targeting Prototheca , amplicon sequencing, and Bayesian phylogenetic analysis confirmed it clustered within Helicosporidium sp. with 100% posterior probability. The genus Helicosporidium was found to nest within the genus Prototheca , forming a clade with Prototheca wickerhamii with 80% posterior probability., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
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