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Trypanosome Diversity in Wildlife Species from the Serengeti and Luangwa Valley Ecosystems

  • Harriet Auty,

    Current address: Epidemiology Research Unit, Scottish Agricultural College, Inverness, United Kingdom

    Affiliations Centre for Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, Institute for Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medicine, Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom

  • Neil E. Anderson,

    Affiliation Centre for Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Kim Picozzi,

    Affiliation Centre for Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Tiziana Lembo,

    Affiliations Centre for Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, Institute for Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medicine, Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom

  • Joseph Mubanga,

    Affiliation Centre for Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Richard Hoare,

    Affiliation Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute - Messerli Foundation Wildlife Veterinary Programme, Arusha, Tanzania

  • Robert D. Fyumagwa,

    Affiliation Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute - Serengeti Wildlife Research Centre, Arusha, Tanzania

  • Barbara Mable,

    Affiliation Institute for Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medicine, Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom

  • Louise Hamill,

    Affiliation Centre for Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

  • Sarah Cleaveland,

    Affiliations Centre for Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, Institute for Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, College of Medicine, Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom

  • Susan C. Welburn

    sue.welburn@ed.ac.uk

    Affiliation Centre for Infectious Diseases, College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Abstract

Background

The importance of wildlife as reservoirs of African trypanosomes pathogenic to man and livestock is well recognised. While new species of trypanosomes and their variants have been identified in tsetse populations, our knowledge of trypanosome species that are circulating in wildlife populations and their genetic diversity is limited.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Molecular phylogenetic methods were used to examine the genetic diversity and species composition of trypanosomes circulating in wildlife from two ecosystems that exhibit high host species diversity: the Serengeti in Tanzania and the Luangwa Valley in Zambia. Phylogenetic relationships were assessed by alignment of partial 18S, 5.8S and 28S trypanosomal nuclear ribosomal DNA array sequences within the Trypanosomatidae and using ITS1, 5.8S and ITS2 for more detailed analysis of the T. vivax clade. In addition to Trypanosoma brucei, T. congolense, T. simiae, T. simiae (Tsavo), T. godfreyi and T. theileri, three variants of T. vivax were identified from three different wildlife species within one ecosystem, including sequences from trypanosomes from a giraffe and a waterbuck that differed from all published sequences and from each other, and did not amplify with conventional primers for T. vivax.

Conclusions/Significance

Wildlife carries a wide range of trypanosome species. The failure of the diverse T. vivax in this study to amplify with conventional primers suggests that T. vivax may have been under-diagnosed in Tanzania. Since conventional species-specific primers may not amplify all trypanosomes of interest, the use of ITS PCR primers followed by sequencing is a valuable approach to investigate diversity of trypanosome infections in wildlife; amplification of sequences outside the T. brucei clade raises concerns regarding ITS primer specificity for wildlife samples if sequence confirmation is not also undertaken.

Author Summary

The trypanosomes include a number of species that cause disease in livestock. In recent years, several trypanosomes have been identified which do not fit into the classic trypanosome classification system. However, previous work has focused on trypanosomes identified in the tsetse vector, with little information available on trypanosomes found in their natural hosts, wildlife. We studied trypanosome sequences from wildlife in Serengeti National Park in Tanzania and the Luangwa Valley in Zambia and found a number of trypanosome species pathogenic to livestock were circulating in these areas. For Trypanosoma vivax, one of the causes of trypanosomiasis in cattle, variants were identified in giraffe and waterbuck that were different from all published sequences and from each other. These variants did not test positive with the molecular tests usually used to identify T. vivax suggesting that T. vivax may often be under-diagnosed in Tanzania. The trypanosome classification system is facing challenges as molecular data are incorporated into a system that historically was based on factors such as morphology, host range and geographical distribution.

Introduction

The African trypanosomes include a number of species of importance for human and livestock health (Table 1). Trypanosome classification was for many decades based on morphology, host range, distribution and pathogenicity but accumulating molecular evidence shows this is an oversimplification. Phylogenetic data have indicated the existence of previously unidentified trypanosome species, subspecies and variants [1]. Most of the ‘new’ trypanosomes identified have come from investigations into trypanosomes found in tsetse flies. Identification of T. simiae Tsavo followed the failure of a trypanosome to hybridise with existing DNA probes [2] and similarly T. godfreyi was described when isoenzyme and DNA analysis indicated a trypanosome that differed from previously recognised species found in Glossina morsitans submorsitans in The Gambia [3]. Investigations of tsetse populations in Tanzania indicated a parasite that failed to amplify with existing PCR primers and led to the designation ‘T. godfreyi-like’ [4] and ‘T. brucei-like’ [5] parasites in tsetse flies.

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Table 1. Summary of the host range and pathogenicity of the Salivarian trypanosomes.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001828.t001

These investigations of ‘novel’ trypanosomes in tsetse flies do not provide information on the life of trypanosomes within their vertebrate hosts but do provide a quick method of identifying potential new agents within a system. To identify trypanosome host ranges and diversity it is essential to study trypanosomes that are circulating within and between wildlife (and other) hosts. As wildlife can act as reservoirs of trypanosomes pathogenic to both humans and livestock [6], [7], [8], understanding trypanosomes circulating in wildlife populations has implications for control of diseases of economic and public health importance and is critical information for agencies following a One Health approach to disease management [9].

Limited information exists on the trypanosome species present in different wildlife species or their genetic diversity. Early studies on wildlife relied on microscopy, for example [7], [10], that is unreliable for trypanosome species identification and for differentiating within subgenera (between T. congolense, T. simiae and T. godfreyi) or if mixed infections are present. Microscopy also has a low sensitivity [11], particularly problematic in wildlife species, which often show low parasitaemia [12]. The relatively recent description of T. godfreyi and T. simiae Tsavo means that although these trypanosomes appear widespread in certain tsetse populations [4], [13], [14], their natural hosts are not well described. The logistical difficulties of obtaining samples from free-ranging species has limited studies on wildlife, with most phylogenetic information limited to single animals [15]. Therefore, despite continuing discussions on the taxonomic implications of new species, subspecies and groups of trypanosomes identified in tsetse populations [1], little progress has yet been made in exploring trypanosome diversity in the wildlife hosts where these trypanosomes evolved.

A suite of molecular tools have been developed to identify trypanosomes, both in tsetse and in vertebrate hosts [16], [17]. PCR primers which target species-specific repetitive satellite DNA sequences have been described for identification of T. brucei sensu lato, T. congolense (savannah, forest and Kilifi groups), T. vivax, T. simiae, T. simiae Tsavo and T. godfreyi [2], [18], [19], [20], [21]. For T. vivax, the target sequence is not present in all isolates, particularly in East Africa; additional primers have been developed based on a sequence from a gene encoding a differentially expressed protein captured in an antigen detection enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, thought to be found in all T. vivax [22]. The prevalence of T. vivax in tsetse populations in Tanzania was found to be higher using these primers, compared with those based on satellite DNA sequences [4].

Species-specific primers amplify only the target species, and will not amplify unidentified or diverse trypanosomes that do not carry the target sequence. Primers which target the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of ribosomal DNA rely on species-specific differences in sequence length to differentiate trypanosome species [23], [24], [25]. These primer sites are well conserved across trypanosome species; even sequences from diverse or previously unidentified trypanosomes are likely to be amplified - particularly important in identifying trypanosomes in wildlife hosts.

Serengeti National Park, Tanzania and Luangwa Valley, Zambia comprise areas of high wildlife density and diversity. In addition, around both of these ecosystems, rural livelihoods are dependent on small-scale livestock production, including cattle, sheep, goats and pigs. The importance of trypanosomiasis in livestock in these areas is well recognised, with prevalence of 5% for T. congolense, 0.6% for T. vivax and 6% for T. brucei (using species-specific primers) in cattle around Serengeti [26], and prevalence of 74% for T. congolense, 23% for T. vivax and 2% for T. brucei (using ITS primers) in cattle in Luangwa Valley [27].

In this study we used ITS primers [23] to amplify partial 18S, ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2 and partial 28S regions of ribosomal DNA to identify trypanosome species circulating in two wildlife-rich ecosystems. Clonal sequence analysis was carried out to confirm the identity of trypanosomes found and to explore the phylogenetic relationships among identified sequences.

Materials and Methods

Field sample collection

Blood samples were collected from a range of wildlife species in Serengeti National Park, Tanzania between 2002 and 2007, and Luangwa Valley, Zambia between 2005 and 2007. In Tanzania samples were collected from animals found dead, or animals immobilised for conservation management or disease surveillance purposes. In animals found dead, blood samples were collected from the heart if a post mortem examination was conducted and from larger peripheral veins or blood pools in the carcase if no post mortem examination was carried out. The cause of death was not routinely established but included kills by predators and road traffic accidents. Time between death and sampling was estimated not to exceed six hours. In Zambia, samples were collected from animals immobilised as part of routine conservation management activities or from animals harvested as part of commercial safari hunting operations in game management areas. Further details have been published previously [28]. Whole blood samples were preserved on FTA classic cards (Whatman Biosciences, Cambridge, UK).

Ethics statement

This study utilised blood samples collected from wild animals. In Tanzania samples were collected opportunistically from animals found dead, or immobilised for other reasons such as to put on radio collars. Additional samples were collected from warthogs which were immobilised to collect blood samples for trypanosome surveillance. Animals were released unharmed after sampling. All activities were approved by the Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute, Tanzania National Parks and Tanzania Commission for Science and Technology (permit numbers 2005-102-CC-2005-07, 2006-143-ER-2005-07, 2007-163-ER-2005-07). In Zambia samples were collected from animals that had already been shot as part of commercial safari hunting activities under a strictly licensed quota system managed by the Zambian Wildlife Authority. These animals were not shot for the purpose of this study. Additional samples were also collected from animals captured and released unharmed as part of a translocation exercise for the Zambia/Malawi Transfrontier Conservation Area. All activities in protected areas were fully approved by the Zambian Wildlife Authority (permit numbers 316295 and 323947). All sampling protocols were approved by the Zambian Wildlife Authority and the Zambian Department of Veterinary and Livestock Development. All sampling protocols adhered to relevant national guidelines (from Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute and Zambia Wildlife Authority) for handling and sampling free ranging wildlife. For all samples the relevant export and import licences were obtained, including CITES permits for samples from animals on CITES appendices 1 and 2.

Sample preparation and PCR

Five discs per sample were cut from FTA cards using a 3 mm diameter Harris Micro Punch tool. Between each sample, 2 punches were taken from clean filter paper, to prevent cross-contamination. Discs were prepared for analysis using the following protocol: two washes of 15 minutes each with FTA purification reagent (Whatman Biosciences, Cambridge, UK), followed by two washes of 15 minutes each with TE buffer (Sigma Aldrich, Dorset, UK). Discs were dried at room temperature for 90 minutes, then incubated with 5% chelex solution at 90°C for 30 minutes to elute DNA from the card [29].

The ITS primers described by Cox et al. [23] were used to amplify the partial 18S, ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2 and partial 28S regions (Table 2). PCR was carried out in 25 µl reaction volumes, containing 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 9.0, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 50 mM KCl, 0.1% TritonX-100 and 0.01% (w/v) stabiliser (all combined in SuperTaq PCR buffer, HT Biotechnologies, Cambridge, UK), 2 µM of each outside primer ITS1 and ITS2, 1 mM total dNTPs, 1.25 Units of Biotaq (Bioline Ltd, London, UK), and 1 µl of eluted DNA. The second round reaction contained 1 µl of first round product, and used internal primers ITS3 and ITS4. Each PCR batch included genomic DNA positive controls, one negative disc and one water negative control. Thermal cycling was carried out in a DNA Engine DYAD Peltier thermal cycler. PCR products were run on 1.5% (w/v) agarose gels at 100 V, stained with ethidium bromide and visualised under an ultraviolet transilluminator.

Clonal sequence generation

ITS primers generate PCR products of varying length, depending on the trypanosome species, subspecies or group [23], listed in Table 2. In this study, ITS PCR results showed band sizes between 550 and 1000 bp which were not consistent with the expected sequence lengths. Bands were selected from this size range for sequencing. In addition, bands were sequenced from two samples that were of the size expected for T. brucei and T. congolense, to confirm the identity of these bands. DNA was extracted from selected bands in agarose gels using a Qiagen MinElute DNA extraction kit (Qiagen, Crawley, UK) following manufacturer's protocols. Cloning was carried out using a Qiagen PCR Cloning kit. The ligation-reaction mixture contained 4 µl of purified PCR product, 1 µl of pDrive cloning vector (50 ng/µl) and 5 µl of distilled water and was incubated at 4°C for two hours, and otherwise followed manufacturer's protocols. Plasmid DNA was purified using the Qiaprep Spin Miniprep kit and the eluted DNA was submitted for sequencing (GATC Biotech, Germany) with M13 forward and reverse primers. One clone was submitted for each selected band.

Sequence analysis

Initial sequence inspection and cleaning was conducted in Bioedit [30]. Sequences were identified by BLAST search (NCBI Blastn). Sequence similarity was also assessed by shared percent identity over the whole sequence: (i) between sequences generated in this study and available reference sequences; and (ii) between sequences generated in this study identified as the same species or group. For T. godfreyi, the only existing sequence in Genbank for comparison covered ITS1 only (130 bp). For T. vivax, existing sequences covered ITS1, 5.8S and ITS2 only (534 bp). Blast searches and shared identity assessment were therefore conducted over these reduced sequence lengths.

Phylogenetic analyses were conducted to infer the relationships of sequences generated in this study with other trypanosomes. The partial 18S, 5.8S and partial 28S sequences were aligned using the ClustalW [31] accessory application in Bioedit, followed by visual optimisation (it was not possible to align the ITS1 and ITS2 regions across all variants found, due to their hypervariability). In addition to all sequences generated in this study, included in the alignment were sequences listed in Genbank for this region within the T. brucei clade; we use T. brucei clade to refer to the clade which includes T. brucei, T. congolense, T. simiae, T. godfreyi and T. vivax and related subspecies and groups, as by [32]: only one sequence each was available for T. congolense savannah, forest and Kilifi, T. simiae, T. simiae Tsavo and T. godfreyi; for T. brucei one representative sequence was included; for T. vivax, one clone of each of the seven available published sequences was used. In addition, published sequences from outside the T. brucei clade but within the Trypanosomatidae were included to help identify more diverse sequences. Accession numbers for all reference sequences are included in Figure 1. A neighbour-joining tree was constructed using Geneious [33] under a Hasegawa-Kishino-Yano (HKY) [34] model of substitution. Bodo caudatus was included as an outgroup; B. caudatus is a member of the Bodonidae, another kinetoplastid family, and has been shown to be a valid outgroup for trypanosomatids [32]. Confidence in branching relationships was assessed using bootstrap re-sampling over 1000 replicates. Using the same alignment, trees were also constructed in PAUP * 4.0 [35] using minimum evolution and maximum likelihood optimality criteria, both with an HKY model of substitution and default settings for the heuristic searches conducted.

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Figure 1. Neighbour-joining tree based on partial 18S, 5.8S and partial 28S trypanosomatid sequences.

Bodo caudatus was included as an outgroup. Bootstrap values are shown where support is >70%. Sequences generated in this study are shown in blue (identified sequences in dark blue, unidentified sequences in light blue), and labelled with sample identity; pathogen species (UnK if unknown); host species; Genbank ID. Other sequences were retrieved from Genbank and are shown in black, and are labelled with pathogen species and Genbank ID. T. brucei clade indicated in grey box.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001828.g001

Blast results suggested that T. vivax sequences generated in this study did not closely match existing sequences. To assess the phylogenetic relationships within the T. vivax clade, ITS1, 5.8S and ITS2 sequences were aligned for all sequences clustering in this group, together with all T. vivax sequences available in Genbank for this region, and an unrooted neighbour-joining tree constructed using a HKY model of substitution in Geneious, with bootstrap values calculated for 1000 replicates. Accession numbers for all T. vivax reference sequences are listed in Figure 2.

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Figure 2. Unrooted neighbour-joining dendrogram of ITS1, 5.8S and ITS2 sequences for Trypanosoma vivax.

Bootstrap values are shown at nodes with >70% support. Sequences generated in this study shown in black; other sequences retrieved from Genbank and listed in Table 3. Sequence locations are shown by colour: Tanzania (this study, black); Kenya (blue); Mozambique (green); Nigeria (purple); South America (red). Host species from which sequence was amplified are indicated. Accession numbers for reference sequences are: IL3905 cl8, Genbank ID:DQ316040; IL3905 cl4Ro, DQ316043; IL3905 cl4, DQ316039; IL3905 cl3Ro, DQ316042; IL3905 cl2Ro, DQ316041; IL3905 cl5Ro, DQ316044; IL3905 cl2 DQ316037; IL3905 cl3, DQ316038; TviBrMi cl4, DQ316048; TviBrPo cl13, DQ316049; TviBrCa cl2, DQ316045; Y485, U22316; TviBrMi cl2, DQ316047; TviVeMe cl1, DQ316051; TviVeMe cl12, DQ316052; TviBrCa cl13, DQ316046; TviBrPo cl6, DQ316050; TviMzNy cl5, EU482080; TviMzNy cl2, EU482079; TviMzNy cl8, EU482082; TviMzNy cl1, EU482078; TviMzNy cl6, EU482081.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001828.g002

Additional PCR analysis

Sequences which were clustered with T. vivax were also tested with T. vivax-specific primers to establish whether these trypanosomes would be detected by conventional species-specific primers. The primers described by Masake et al. [22] were used that have been shown to be most appropriate for T. vivax in Tanzania [4]. PCRs were performed in triplicate on eluted DNA, following the published protocol and cycling conditions [22] (Table 2).

For T. godfreyi, the only reference sequence available for the ITS region covered only ITS1. Therefore, for two samples where T. godfreyi was tentatively identified on the basis of ITS1 similarity, confirmatory T. godfreyi-specific PCRs were also conducted, using the primers and conditions listed in Table 2 [20].

Results

Blast searches

Thirty-two new ribosomal DNA array sequences were generated from wildlife samples. Close matches were obtained to existing Genbank trypanosome sequences for 19 of the sequences generated in this study (Table 3). Sequences identified from zebra and spotted hyena closely matched existing sequences from T. brucei s.l. and sequences identified from spotted hyena and lion closely matched T. congolense savannah. Sequences TS07126, TS06061, ZWA7307 and ZWA6107 all obtained from warthogs and sized between 967 and 972 bp, shared 90–91% identity with T. simiae Tsavo (U22318) over the whole sequenced region. T. simiae Tsavo sequences from Serengeti (n = 2) and Luangwa (n = 2) were very similar, sharing 96–98% identity over the whole sequence length. TS06062 and ZWA5307 from warthog most closely matched T. simiae, sharing 86% identity with the one available reference sequence U22320. Sequences from warthogs in Serengeti and Luangwa shared 97% identity with one another. Sequences found in warthogs from both Serengeti (TS06134) and Luangwa (ZWA6307, ZWA7407) most closely matched T. godfreyi, although only the ITS1 sequence is available in Genbank for this species (130 bp, AY661891). ZPU2807, ZPU2707 and Z18106, all from puku, were most similar to T. theileri. These sequences shared 79–80% identity with AB007814, identified from a cow, but were approximately 70 bp shorter than the expected sequence length [23]. They were very similar to each other, sharing 98–99% identity.

Ten sequences from zebra, buffalo and waterbuck that were identified did not closely match any existing sequences (see Table 3). Three showed alignment to non-trypanosomatid organisms, Dimastigella trypanoformis, Malassezia restricta and uncultured fungus.

Alignment of partial 18S, 5.8S and partial 28S

An alignment of partial 18S, 5.8S and partial 28S sequences (341 characters; 209 for T. vivax sequences) was used to reconstruct phylogenetic trees using neighbour joining, minimum evolution and maximum likelihood methods. Regardless of which method was used, sequences from this study clustered with the same reference sequences; the neighbour joining tree is presented (Figure 1).

Sequences identified as T. brucei, T. congolense, T. simiae, and T. simiae Tsavo each formed strongly supported groups with the relevant reference sequences (bootstrap values 100, 92, 94, 85 respectively). The sequences tentatively identified as T. godfreyi clustered close to T. simiae and T. simiae Tsavo, as would be expected for T. godfreyi. All T. vivax sequences, including the three identified in this study, formed a separate clade with 100% bootstrap support, which sat on the periphery of the T. brucei clade, as is usually found for T. vivax [15], [32].

The thirteen sequences that did not match any existing trypanosome sequence can be considered in three groups: (i) Z3206 from a hippopotamus consistently clustered close to T. congolense and T. brucei but the exact location was not well resolved; (ii) samples Z26907 (buffalo), TS07016 (spotted hyaena), Z1505 (hippopotamus), TS06050 (wildebeest) and TS07116 (wildebeest) formed a separate group with good boot strap support (79%). This group consistently sat outside the T. brucei clade but within the Trypanosomatidae, but the resolution was not sufficient to further identify these sequences; (iii) a third group of sequences consistently sat outside the Trypanosomatidae and included sequences matching other organisms such as Dimastigella and Malassezia: TS07118 (Thomson's gazelle), Z9506 (leopard), Z16006 (impala), ZE4107 (zebra), Z27907 (buffalo), Z1605 (lion) and Z18706 (waterbuck) (not included in Figure 1).

Alignment of ITS1, 5.8S and ITS2 for T. vivax

Based on the alignment of the complete ITS region for the three T. vivax sequences generated in this study with published T. vivax sequences, TS06009 from a buffalo was similar to the only available East African reference sequence (IL3905), isolated from a cow in Kenya [36] (Figure 2). Sequences from a waterbuck (TS07154) and giraffe (TS07210), although clearly clustering with T. vivax, differed from all existing sequences, including sequences from Kenya (IL3905) and Mozambique (TviMzNy) (Figure 2).

Additional PCR analysis

Two out of three of the samples identified as T. godfreyi were tested with T. godfreyi -specific primers and tested positive. The T. vivax sequences identified in this study all tested negative with conventional T. vivax-specific primers.

Discussion

Clonal sequence analysis of ITS PCR products from blood samples collected from wildlife species in Serengeti, Tanzania and Luangwa Valley, Zambia, identified a number of trypanosome species, including T. congolense, T. brucei, T simiae, T. simiae Tsavo, T. godfreyi, T. vivax and T. theileri, and revealed new diversity within the T. vivax clade.

Phylogenetic trees

Trees were constructed using an alignment of (i) partial 18S, 5.8S and partial 28S sequences and (ii) ITS1, 5.8S and ITS2 for T. vivax. The resolution gained from the alignment of 18S, 5.8S and partial 28S sequences was not sufficient to accurately place all clades outside the T. brucei clade in relation to one another; however, the aim of this study was to identify sequences rather than obtain perfect resolution of complex phylogenies, which has been well covered by other authors [32], [37].

Wildlife hosts of T. godfreyi, T. simiae and T. simiae Tsavo

Identification of T. godfreyi and T. simiae Tsavo in warthogs confirmed suids as hosts of these species. T. godfreyi was identified as a new species when found in tsetse [3] and has since been found to be widespread in tsetse populations [4], [13]. Experimental infection of domestic pigs resulted in chronic disease and it was hypothesized that T. godfreyi may naturally circulate in warthogs, but we believe this is the first time that T. godfreyi has been confirmed in wild suids. T. simiae Tsavo was first identified in tsetse in Tsavo National Park, Kenya [2], and was later confirmed as a sub-group of T. simiae, rather than T. congolense as had first been thought [38], [39], [40]. Experimentally, T. simiae Tsavo has only been found to infect pigs; whether warthogs represent the only wild host of these trypanosomes remains unknown.

T. simiae, T. simiae Tsavo and T. godfreyi sequences showed remarkable similarity between Serengeti in Tanzania and Luangwa Valley, Zambia, despite differing from existing sequences. While small differences from the existing sequences could have been explained by errors from the PCR and sequencing processes (given that only one clone was sequenced per sample), the consistency observed between sequences from the two areas precludes this as an explanation. It is interesting to note that all published sequences were identified from tsetse [14], [41]; whether the differences between our sequences and published sequences reflect identification of different strains or an artefact of isolates from tsetse with subsequent rodent passage is unclear.

Trypanosome classification

T. simiae, T. simiae Tsavo and T. godfreyi are closely related genetically, as well as sharing characteristics of morphology, development in tsetse and host range. T. godfreyi was classified as a new species predominantly on the basis of isoenzyme analysis; it was argued that T. godfreyi was as genetically and phenotypically distinct from T. simiae and T. congolense as they were from each other [3]. However, in this study T. godfreyi was not notably more different from T. simiae than T. simiae Tsavo was (nine nucleotide differences between T. simiae and T. godfreyi compared to six between T. simiae and T. simiae Tsavo on the alignment of partial 18S, 5.8S and partial 28S) which is consistent with other phylogenetic analyses [4], [40]. In contrast, variants of T. congolense, which also show considerable genetic variation, have been classified into distinctive groups – savannah, riverine forest and Kenya coast or Kilifi [42] and it has recently been suggested that variants of T. vivax should be grouped into types A, B and C [43] on the basis of genetic differences. Clearly, incorporating genetic data into historic taxonomic classifications is not straightforward, but a more consistent approach is needed. The nomenclature suggested by Adams et al. [43] of naming groups A, B and C should be used more widely as the geographical nomenclature used in the past to name trypanosomes can be misleading: T. simiae Tsavo was named after the location of its first identification in Kenya [2] but has since been identified in other areas including Tanzania and Uganda [4], [13], [44]; the subgroups of T. congolense have all been found in multiple locations and ecosystems, often with multiple subgroups in one location [4], [45].

T. vivax diversity

We identified three variants of T. vivax in three different wildlife species. TS06009 found in this study from a buffalo in Serengeti closely matched sequence IL3905 from a cow in Kenya. However, sequences from a giraffe (TS07214) and a waterbuck (TS07154), whilst clearly within the T. vivax clade, were divergent from all existing sequences. Phylogenetic analysis of T. vivax previously indicated that whilst isolates from West Africa and South America form a homogeneous lineage, sequences identified from East Africa are both different from the West African and South American sequences and are more diverse [15], [36]. This is consistent with differences between East and West African isolates in clinical presentation, morphology and molecular characteristics [22], [46], [47], [48]. T. vivax found in tsetse in Tanzania [4] and T. vivax identified in nyala antelope in Mozambique have previously been shown to differ from all other sequences on phylogenetic analysis, including an East African T. vivax from Kenya, whilst still clustering in the T. vivax clade [15].

TS07154 and TS07214 are distinct from existing sequences including the sequence identified from a nyala in Mozambique (TviMzNy); no sequence was available for the ITS region from the Tanzanian isolate identified by Malele et al. [4]. The high diversity observed here within the T. vivax clade echoes findings in G. pallidipes and G. swynnertoni in Tanzania of two diverse T. vivax genotypes [43]. Adams et al. (2010b) term these T. vivax A and B, with group C comprising West African and South American T. vivax sequences.

The three samples that contained T. vivax sequences in this study did not test positive on PCR with species-specific primers for T. vivax. It is known that T. vivax primers based on a satellite DNA monomer [21] do not amplify all East African T. vivax. However, the primers used here target a sequence thought to be present in all T. vivax [22], shown previously to be the most appropriate for identification of T. vivax in Tanzania [4]. The prevalence of T. vivax detected using species-specific primers in other studies in Tanzania has been low; for example, the prevalence of T. vivax in cattle around Serengeti National Park was found to be 0.6% using the Masake primers that were also used in this study [26]. If T. vivax-specific primers are not detecting T. vivax strains circulating in Tanzania, the true prevalence may be much higher and since T. vivax is an important livestock pathogen, further work is required to determine the true prevalence.

Although this study looked at only a small number of sequences, analysis of several sequences from different wildlife species in one location provides an opportunity to start exploring reasons for the diversity of the Tanzanian T. vivax sequences. Up to now, explanations for differences between T. vivax isolates have considered geographical location, with clear differences between isolates from West Africa and South America versus East Africa [36]. The identification of three distinct T. vivax sequences in the same ecosystem indicates that the existence of different isolates cannot be explained by geographical variation alone. The possibility of strains specific to different wildlife host species cannot be ruled out. Host-specific strains of T. theileri have been identified in cattle and water buffalo within the same geographical areas [49], and selective tsetse feeding may provide an opportunity for host parasite co-evolution [50], [51]. In this study, T. vivax from a buffalo matched a sequence from a cow in Kenya, whilst sequences from giraffe and waterbuck differed from existing sequences. Buffalo and domestic cattle are both Bovinae and may be more likely to share more similar pathogen susceptibility than cattle would share with giraffe or waterbuck. However, more information is needed to test these hypotheses; a study to generate more information on trypanosomes and host sharing between buffalo and cattle is currently underway. Further characterisation of T. vivax in wildlife is clearly necessary, particularly to look at the circulation of strains within and between wildlife host species, and any relevance this may have for transmission to, and pathogenicity in, livestock.

Further investigation of trypanosome infections in wildlife hosts relies on characterisation of the interactions of vector, host and trypanosome. In particular, incorporating information on the prevalence of trypanosome species in different wildlife hosts and tsetse blood meal data will help to elucidate the relative roles of host immune response compared to tsetse feeding patterns and further manuscripts are in preparation on this subject.

Unidentified or non-trypanosomatid sequences

Thirteen sequences did not closely match any existing sequences, or matched sequences from non-trypanosomatid organisms. One sequence (TS3206) clustered consistently within the T. brucei clade, close to T. congolense and T. brucei. It would be interesting to gain more information on the trypanosome that yielded this sequence, given its close phylogenetic relationship to trypanosomes of economic importance as human and livestock pathogens. Five sequences were identified that sat within the trypanosomatids but outside the T. brucei clade. These sequences do not closely match any existing sequences and phylogenetic trees did not give sufficient resolution to draw firm conclusions regarding their identity. Further work is necessary to identify these sequences, for example using other genetic regions with reference sequences available such as glycosomal glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase or small subunit ribosomal genes for further identification [52]. Three sequences matched sequences from non-trypanosomatid organisms – Dimastigella trypanoformis, Malassezia restricta and an uncultured fungus, and phylogenetic analysis confirmed that four further sequences which did not match any existing sequences also sat outside the trypanosomatids.

Implications for ITS primers

Diagnostic PCRs based on the ITS region rely on interspecies variation in sequence length to identify trypanosome species and subspecies [23]. This study raises a number of concerns regarding this approach for identification of trypanosome species in wildlife without sequencing. Twelve sequences in this study represented non-target organisms; these varied in length and overlapped with sequence lengths described for other trypanosome species, so could not be differentiated from target organisms by size alone. In addition, the diverse sequences in the T. vivax clade varied in length from 594 to 654 bp, and overlapped with the sequence length of T. godfreyi (648–650 bp). ITS primers in wildlife may give equivocal results and further investigation is necessary to establish whether they could be used to reliably identify trypanosome species or subspecies in wildlife without sequencing PCR products. Since species-specific primers may not amplify all trypanosomes of interest, the use of ITS PCR primers followed by sequencing is a good approach to investigate diversity of trypanosome infections in wildlife, but could be combined with other genetic regions to give greater phylogenetic resolution.

Conclusions

Analysis of the ITS region of trypanosomes circulating in wildlife in two distinct geographical areas identified a large number of trypanosome species, including species that had not been identified before in wildlife as well as a number of species that are of importance as livestock pathogens, and revealed new diversity within the T. vivax clade. Although wildlife has been recognised as a source of livestock pathogens for many years, the addition of phylogenetic information raises many questions regarding the trypanosomes of wildlife and livestock, particularly regarding transmission, host sharing and pathogenicity. However, the absence of reliable high-throughput diagnostic tools to identify trypanosomes in wildlife makes investigations difficult and further phylogenetic analysis is likely to be necessary to explore these complex relationships.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Tanzania National Parks (TANAPA), Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute (TAWIRI) and Tanzania Commission for Science and Technology (COSTECH) for permission to conduct this work in Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, and the TAWIRI-Messerli Wildlife Veterinary Programme, TANAPA Veterinary Unit and Viral Transmission Dynamics Project, Serengeti, for assistance with sample collection. We are grateful to the Zambian Wildlife Authority, Department of Veterinary and Livestock Services, Zambia, Conservation Foundation (Zambia) and the North Luangwa Conservation Project for permission and assistance with sample collection in Zambia. We would like to thank Liam Morrison for advice on the manuscript.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: HA NEA KP JM SC SCW. Performed the experiments: HA NEA KP TL JM RH RDF LH. Analyzed the data: HA NEA BM. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: KP BM RH RDF SC SCW. Wrote the paper: HA NEA KP TL JM BM SC SCW.

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