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Research Project: Molecular Approaches to Control Intestinal Parasites that Affect the Microbiome in Swine and Small Ruminants

Location: Animal Parasitic Diseases Laboratory

Title: Taxonomy of the Trichinella genus

Author
item POZIO, EDOARDO - Istituto Superiore Di Sanita
item Zarlenga, Dante

Submitted to: Book Chapter
Publication Type: Book / Chapter
Publication Acceptance Date: 7/1/2021
Publication Date: 7/26/2021
Citation: Pozio, E., Zarlenga, D.S. 2021. Taxonomy of the Trichinella genus. In: Bruschi, Fabrizio, editor. Trichinella and Trichinellosis. London, UK: Elsevier Academic Press. 395-415.

Interpretive Summary: Book chapter

Technical Abstract: For more than 100 years, the genus Trichinella was considered monospecific and Trichinella spiralis was considered the only species with a cosmopolitan distribution, infecting a very large number of mammals including humans. The domestic cycle involving grazing domestic pigs and farm rats was considered the predominant mode of circulation for T. spiralis; surrounding wildlife were considered as an ancillary part of on farm transmission. The expansion of helminthological investigations on wild animals starting from the 1950s highlighted the presence of nematodes of the genus Trichinella with biological characters different from those of T. spiralis, but without discernable morphological characters at any of the developmental stages that could be used to differentiate species. The switch from a classical taxonomy to new taxonomic studies first based on crossing-breeding experiments in laboratory animals, and then on biochemical (allozymes) and molecular characters, has allowed the identification of ten sibling species and three genotypes divided into two clades based on the presence or absence of a collagen capsule around the muscle larva. The clade in which the muscle larvae do not induce capsule formation infects mammals and birds (Trichinella pseudospiralis) or mammals and reptiles (Trichinella papuae and Trichinella zimbabwensis). The clade characterized by the presence of a collagen capsule around the nurse-cell-larva complex infects only mammals. This clade is comprised of seven species (T. spiralis, T. nativa, T. britovi, T. murrelli, T. nelsoni, T. patagoniensis and T. chanchalensis) and three genotypes (Trichinella T6, T8 and T9). Each taxon is characterized by a well-defined distribution area; however, there are two species which, for different reasons, have a cosmopolitan distribution: T. spiralis spread by the passive introduction of infected swine in most continents and T. pseudospiralis spread by birds worldwide. Carnivores are the main hosts of Trichinella species and genotypes, with the exception of T. spiralis which is also very well adapted to suidae and consequently represents the main causative agent of human trichinellosis. This taxonomic scheme is supported by the analysis of more than ten thousand Trichinella isolates from different host species and continents. However, there remain some geographical areas from which no Trichinella parasites have been collected and identified at the species/genotype level such as Central America and India. The phylogeny of the genus showed that the encapsulated and non-encapsulated clades diverged from their most recent common ancestor in Asia about 21 million years ago (mya) with taxon diversifications commencing about 10-7 mya. Herein we present the most up-to-date information on the taxonomy of Trichinella.