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      Genetic relationship among gill-infecting Myxobolus species (Myxosporea) of cyprinids: molecular evidence of importance of tissue-specificity.

      Diseases of aquatic organisms
      Animals, Base Sequence, Cluster Analysis, Cypriniformes, DNA Primers, DNA, Ribosomal, genetics, Eukaryota, classification, cytology, Fish Diseases, parasitology, pathology, Gills, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Protozoan Infections, Animal, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Spores

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          Abstract

          The importance of tissue-specificity was studied in Myxobolus spp. infecting the gills of 7 cyprinid species. The 18S rDNA of 10 Myxobolus species was amplified by optimised nested-PCR, resulting in approximately 1600 bp PCR products. Phylogenetic trees generated by distance matrix and parsimony analyses revealed 4 main groups. Muscle-infecting species all belonged to the same group, while members of 2 gill-infecting groups were clearly distinguishable on the basis of tissue-specificity, and were also recognisable by differences in spore morphology. On the basis of tissue tropism, phylogenetic relationships among the species examined indicate that genetic separation is a more ancient evolutionary feature than host-specificity.

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