Aspects of Genetic Diversity, Host Specificity and Public Health Significance of Single‐Celled Intestinal Parasites Commonly Observed in Humans and Mostly Referred to as ‘Non‐Pathogenic’

📖 Top 30% JournalSep 9, 2025APMIS : acta pathologica, microbiologica, et immunologica Scandinavica

Genetic Differences, Host Preferences, and Health Importance of Single-Celled Intestinal Parasites Often Called 'Non-Harmful' in Humans

AI simplified

Abstract

Over 30 species of common luminal intestinal parasitic protists () have been identified, with significant genetic diversity observed among them.

  • Most older children in Nigeria are colonised by Blastocystis, while nearly all children in Danish day-care institutions encounter Dientamoeba.
  • Emerging data suggest CLIPPs are more prevalent in healthy individuals than in those with gastrointestinal symptoms.
  • A more or less clonal expansion of one Dientamoeba genotype is noted, which appears to have global predominance.
  • Extensive genetic diversity is found among subtypes of Blastocystis, with zoonotic subtypes potentially linked to symptoms.
  • New lineages of Entamoeba and significant genetic variation among CLIPPs challenge existing species definitions.
  • Cryptic host specificity is demonstrated at the allele level, indicating adaptations of CLIPPs to their specific hosts.

AI simplified

Full Text

We can’t show the full text here under this license. Use the link below to read it at the source.