Skip to main content
Dryad

Trypanosoma cruzi in Mexican Neotropical vectors and mammals: Wildlife, livestock, pets, and human population

Data files

Nov 07, 2022 version files 253.70 KB

Abstract

The aim of the present study has been to provide primary evidence of Trypanosoma cruzi landscape genetics in the Mexican Neotropics. T. cruzi and DTU prevalence were analyzed in landscape communities of vectors, wildlife, livestock, pets, and sympatric human populations using endpoint PCR and sequencing of all relevant amplicons from mitochondrial (kDNA) and nuclear (ME, 18S, 24Sα) gene markers.  Although 98% of the infected sample set (N=2963) contained single or mixed infections of DTUI (TcI, 96.2%) and TcVI (22.6%), TcIV and TcII were identified. The sensitivity of individual markers varied and was dependent on the host taxon; kDNA, ME, and 18S combined identified 95% of infections. ME genotyped 90% of vector infections, but 60% of mammals (36% wildlife), while neither 18S nor 24Sα typed more than 20% of mammal infections. Available gene fragments to identify or genotype T. cruzi are not universally sensitive for all landscape parasite populations, highlighting important T. cruzi heterogeneity among mammal reservoir taxa and triatomine species.