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Article

Genotyping Echinococcus multilocularis in Human Alveolar Echinococcosis Patients: An EmsB Microsatellite Analysis

1
UMR CNRS 6249 Laboratoire Chrono-environnement, Université Franche-Comté, 16 Route de Gray, 25030 Besançon, France
2
Department of Parasitology-Mycology, National Reference Centre for Echinococcoses, University Hospital of Besançon, 25030 Besançon, France
3
Institute for Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine, University of Berne, 3001 Berne, Switzerland
4
Parasitology-Mycology Laboratory, Lariboisière-Saint Louis-Fernand Widal Hospital, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Université de Paris, 75475 Paris, France
5
UMR INTERTRYP, IRD/CIRAD, University of Montpellier, 34398 Montpellier, France
6
ANSES, Nancy Laboratory for Rabies and Wildlife, Wildlife Surveillance and Eco-Epidemiology Unit, Technopôle Agricole et Vétérinaire, B.P. 40009, 54220 Malzéville, France
7
Department of Hepatology, University Hospital of Besançon, 25000 Besançon, France
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Pathogens 2020, 9(4), 282; https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens9040282
Submission received: 9 March 2020 / Revised: 6 April 2020 / Accepted: 8 April 2020 / Published: 13 April 2020
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Echinococcus)

Abstract

:
For clinical epidemiology specialists, connecting the genetic diversity of Echinococcus multilocularis to sources of infection or particular sites has become somewhat of a holy grail. It is very difficult to trace the infection history of alveolar echinococcosis (AE) patients as there may be an incubation period of five to 15 years before reliable diagnosis. Moreover, the variability of parasitic manifestations in human patients raises the possibility of genetically different isolates of E. multilocularis having different levels of pathogenicity. Thus, the exposure of human patients to different strains or genotypes circulating in geographically different environments may lead to different disease outcomes. Molecular tools, such as the microsatellite marker EmsB, were required to investigate these aspects. This genetic marker was previously tested on a collection of 1211 European field samples predominantly of animal origin, referenced on a publicly available database. In this study, we investigated a panel of 66 metacestode samples (between 1981 and 2019) recovered surgically from 63 patients diagnosed with alveolar echinococcosis originating from four European countries (France, Switzerland, Germany, Belgium). In this study, we identified nine EmsB profiles, five of which were found in patients located in the same areas of France and Switzerland. One profile was detected on both sides of the French-Swiss border, whereas most patients from non-endemic regions clustered together in another profile. EmsB profiles appeared to remain stable over time because similar profiles were detected in patients who underwent surgery recently and patients who underwent surgery some time ago. This study sheds light on possible pathways of contamination in humans, including proximity contamination in some cases, and the dominant contamination profiles in Europe, particularly for extrahepatic lesions.

Graphical Abstract

1. Introduction

Echinococcus multilocularis is the parasite responsible for alveolar echinococcosis (AE) in humans, one of the most dangerous zoonoses in the Northern Hemisphere. It belongs to the Taeniidae family and its life cycle involves passage through several different mammalian hosts. Canine carnivores, particularly red foxes in Europe, are the principal definitive host (DH) and they harbor these worms in their intestines. Experimental estimates of the patent period in carnivores range from 25 days post protoscolex ingestion [1] to beyond 90 days [2]. Rodents act as an intermediate host (IH), following the ingestion of parasite eggs originating from infected carnivore feces contaminating the environment. The oncospheres hatched from the eggs reach the liver of the IH where they develop into metacestodes, and protoscoleces are usually produced two to three months post-infection. Infection ends in the death of the rodent IH within five to eight months of infection. Humans are generally considered to be aberrant IH and protoscoleces rarely develop in infected humans. An estimated 18,000 new cases of AE per year occur worldwide [3], with 1600 cases in Europe and 16,400 in China. It is often challenging to identify the temporal and spatial circumstances surrounding human infection. Indeed, the first symptoms occur after an initial asymptomatic incubation period of 5–15 years [4], and the multiple risk factors [5,6,7] make it almost impossible to trace transmission. Living in an endemic region is the major risk factor for contracting the disease [7], but many other putative risk factors have been identified, including agricultural activities, hunting activities and owning a pet dog or cat [8].
In recent decades, AE human cases have been reported in large parts of Central and Northern Europe, from Eastern Romania [9] to Western France (data from the National Reference Centre for Echinococcosis (NRC-E), Besançon, France). Moreover, E. multilocularis parasites have been found in foxes from Central Romania to Western France [10,11], so Europe as a whole may be considered as a large endemic area. Furthermore, the French patients were diagnosed outside the regions in which this parasite is generally considered endemic (e.g., Brittany and the Pyrenees) ([7], (data from NRC-E), raising questions about the precise limits of the current endemic area. Information about the place of residence of the patients before diagnosis can be obtained from national alveolar echinococcosis registries, such as the NRC-E in France, but the geographic site and timing of infection remain open to speculation. The big question is whether it is possible to associate the strains infecting patients with strains from foxes, given the presumed long interval between infection and diagnosis. This would require a given E. multilocularis strain to remain in a given geographic environment for almost 10–15 years. Another epidemiological factor identified in a recent study is the opportunistic nature of infections with this parasite in patients with immunosuppression [12]. Does the parasite strike human hosts indiscriminately, or are some strains more likely to infect humans than others? Genetic tracking methods could provide important elements for improving our understanding of these parasite infection events. Nuclear and mitochondrial genes are generally used to assess the genetic diversity of the parasite at continental level [13,14,15], but the resolution of these markers is too low for analyses at the local scale. Microsatellite markers are highly polymorphic tools that have been used to describe genotypes in E. multilocularis isolates from different origins [16,17,18]. Bretagne and coworkers (1996) genotyped human AE lesions based on the microsatellites present in the U1snRNA gene spacers [19]. Based on this work, human AE lesions were classified into three profiles according to their geographic origin, with all European patients clustering together in a single profile [16]. The molecular marker EmsB has been extensively used over the last decade to describe the genetic diversity of E. multilocularis. EmsB is a tandemly repeated microsatellite with a (CA)n (GA)n pattern [18], located on chromosome 5 of the parasite [20]. This highly polymorphic marker has been characterized [18,21] and used to describe the genetic diversity of the parasite worldwide [21] and in Europe [22], at the level of an individual country [23,24,25,26] and at the local scale [27,28,29,30]. For example, at the European scale, 32 profiles were described (G1 to G32) from 571 adult worms isolated from 123 red foxes [22]. At the scale of a country, 383 adult worms were isolated from 128 red foxes in France, leading to the description of a total of 22 profiles (p1 to p22 in Umhang and coworkers, 2014) [26]. At the local scale, six profiles (α to ζ) were identified in analyses of 140 adult worms isolated from 25 red foxes in Northern France [29]. EmsB was applied on human samples for the marker development [18,21] and for the genotyping of a unique isolate [31]. Through the EWET (EmsB Website for Echinococcus Typing) project, a collection of 1211 genotyped European samples, for which information is available concerning geographic location, sampling date and host, has been developed and is continually being improved by the scientific community [32].
The aim of this pioneer study was to use for the first time the molecular marker EmsB to assess the genetic diversity and characterize human E. multilocularis infection events temporally and spatially. Robust quality control was applied to the data generated from human alveolar echinococcosis lesions in this study. Moreover, human lesions from different European countries were assigned genetically, with a final comparison with EWET reference data and the generation of graphical maps.

2. Results

2.1. PCR Conditions

EmsB analysis was improved by modifying PCR conditions relative to previous studies [21,26]. Two mixtures (Multiplex PCR Master Mix (MLX) and Platinum Taq Polymerase (PL)) were compared for four AE lesions from a panel of 120 samples referred for PCR diagnosis of Echinococcus infection (Figure 1). The four sets of Multiplex PCR master mix conditions (MLX) results (conditions A to D) obtained for EmsB were compared with those obtained with Platinum Taq DNA polymerase mixture (PL) by Euclidean distance calculation. The smallest distance between MLX and PL EmsB results for the four samples was obtained for MLX condition A and PL (summary in Table 1 and distance matrix in Table S1).
Following this testing of PCR conditions, we adopted MLX condition A (3% DMSO and a final concentration of 0.1 µM for the primers) for amplification of the AE tested samples, and we further checked EmsB profile stability by performing PL PCR in parallel to MLX PCR. From the 120 AE samples initially tested, 66 samples isolated from 63 patients provided results in the two conditions (Table 2). The panel was composed of 66 surgically resected AE lesions from 63 patients, with 59 frozen samples (44 from liver surgery, 11 from extrahepatic tissues (bone (n = 5), brain (n = 1), muscles (n = 1), diaphragm (n = 1), lung (n = 1), spleen (n = 1), other tissue (n = 1)) and non-specified (n = 4), stored at −20 °C until analysis) and 7 formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissues (FFPE) (five from liver surgery and two from non-specified tissues). One patient provided two independent samples (frozen and FFPE liver samples) and one patient provided three independent samples (fresh bone samples) isolated during different surgical interventions (Table 2). The patients underwent surgery in four European countries: in six regions and 15 départements (a French administrative unit) in France (n = 45), seven cantons in Switzerland (n = 15), two Ländern in Germany (n = 5), and in Belgium (n = 1). The specimens were provided by the following centers: Henri Mondor Hospital (HMH, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (APHP), France), the Institute of Parasitology of Berne (IPA, Vetsuisse Faculty, Switzerland) and the National Reference Centre for Echinococcoses (NRC-E, Besançon University Hospital, France) (Table 2). The mean age of the patients at surgery was 55.8 years (95% CI: 51.6–60.0).
A distance matrix was generated (Table S2) and a dendrogram was built to check the EmsB results obtained with the two PCR protocols (Figure S1). For the 66 samples, 62 MLX-PL PCR pairs with a genetic distance of less than 0.1 were clustered together in the dendrogram (94% of the panel). The four poorly assembled samples presented PL profiles in which the samples clustered outside the fixed genetic threshold. For seven samples, EmsB profiles were obtained with formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) material. Six of these PCR pairs were correctly clustered under the fixed threshold. The samples 34-HP-122282-GE-Ber (FFPE) and 35-HP-122285-GE-Ber (fresh material) originated from the same patient and clustered together. For FFPE sample 15-HP-061502-GE-Bw, the two PCR clustered separately in the dendrogram, but with an individual distance of 0.082 between the MLX-A and PL conditions (Table S2).
The EmsB calibrator for fragment size analyses (FSA) run with each EmsB PCR was within the expected size range for all the analyses performed: three peaks at 188, 190 and 192 bp.

2.2. Interlaboratory Control Test

The FSA results obtained for the EchinoRisk samples at the IGB (Institute of Genetics of Berne, Switzerland) and the NRC-E laboratories were compared. A 2 bp shift was observed between the two laboratories (Figure 2). A –2 bp correction was therefore applied to the NRC-E results to ensure that all results were within the reference range [32]. Euclidean distances were calculated between the results obtained at the two laboratories, with the correction applied (Table 3). For a given EchinoRisk tested sample, the MLX-A, PL and IGB conditions were applied (Table S3). The Euclidean distances were below the applied threshold of 0.1 for all but one of the 14 samples (sample UCPR1-499), which gave a stutter-band profile in IGB conditions (Figure 2).

2.3. Hierarchical Clustering Analyses and Distribution of EmsB Profiles

Hierarchical clustering analyses were performed on the 66 DNA samples (Table 2) and outgroups. A threshold genetic distance of 0.1 was used for the dendrogram. Sixty-two patients were clustered into nine profile groups, named P1 to P9 and presented in Figure 3, with the remaining four patients not assigned to any of these groups under the genetic distance threshold of 0.1. The P4 profile clustered 29% (19 patients) of the total samples, and the P8 profile clustered 14% (9 patients) of the total samples. The geographic distribution of the nine profiles is shown in Figure 4a for all profiles, whereas Figure 4b shows the profiles present on the French-Swiss border only. Six of the nine profiles clustered patients from neighboring administrative Régions (P2, P3, P5, P6, P7 and P9); four clustered only patients from French départements (P2, P3, P5 and P7), one clustered only patients from Swiss cantons (P6) and one clustered patients from neighboring Swiss cantons and French départements (P9). Three profiles clustered patients from non-adjoining Régions (P1, P4 and P8). For example, the P1 profile clustered patients from Berlin Bundesland (Germany), the Brussels Région (Belgium), the Canton of Valais (Switzerland) and three French départements. The P4 profile clustered patients from six French départements (Ain, Pas-de-Calais, Haute-Saône, Jura, Doubs and Territoire de Belfort), Freiburg and Baden-Württemberg (Germany) and the Canton of Berne (Switzerland), whereas the P8 profile clustered nine French patients from nine different French départements, with two of the patients located 900 km apart (Figure 4a). The nine patients with extrahepatic lesions presented the profiles P1 (n = 1), P4 (n = 3), P6 (n = 2), P8 (n = 2) and one not assigned to any of these groups. The profile P6 clustered three bone tissue isolates from the same patient.
Figure 5 provides graphical documentation of the occurrence of the identified profiles between 1986 and 2018. Each specific profile appeared one to four times, in different patients, in a given year of surgery.

2.4. Similarities between Individuals

Individual genetic distances were calculated between the tested samples and the EWET reference data. The most similar reference samples (Euclidean distance of 0 to 0.1) were classified with the tested samples (Table S4). The geographic distribution of samples and reference specimens was plotted graphically on maps (Figure 6a,b). For example, for the local EmsB profiles (P2, P3, P5, P6, P7 and P9) and widely distributed profiles (P1, P4 and P8), one representative sample was graphically represented for each profile (Figure 6b). Patients presenting local or widely distributed profiles were mapped together with the matching reference samples.
Information about spatial and temporal changes in place of residence or for trips to epidemiologically different areas was available for 35 patients. Four of these patients lived outside areas of high endemicity, and one patient declared not having lived in or traveled to an endemic area.
The four patients with genotypes not corresponding to any of those found in other patients had genotypes similar to reference genotypes, mostly from foxes (Table S4).

3. Discussion

This study included only data on human AE that had passed a prior quality control process. This preselection was a prerequisite for data analysis, given the complexity of the EmsB marker and the nature of the FSA. We added DMSO to the PCR mixture to improve the stability of the EmsB results as suggested by Baskaran et al. (1996) and Jensen et al. (2010) [33,34]. Moreover, the use of an internal calibrator appeared to be essential, given that different sequencing machines were used. For a robust quality control process, we recommend these conditions: (i) the use of two PCR conditions for each sample tested; (ii) calculation of the Euclidean distance between the two FSA obtained from the two PCRs; and (iii) the use of an internal calibrator. For validation of this process, we investigated DNA from samples from the same patient conserved in different ways (frozen and FFPE tissue specimens). No differences were found between the two samples from the same patient. We therefore concluded that FFPE specimens could be used for retrospective genetic studies, even with a multilocus microsatellite.
We re-evaluated the genetic threshold usually retained for EmsB analysis for the description of profiles from the hierarchical clustering analysis. Based on the hierarchical clustering analysis, we set the threshold at 0.1, which made it possible to define nine relevant profiles on the basis of graphical differences between EmsB electrophoregrams. The threshold generally used for such analyses (0.08) would have distinguished 13 profiles and seven unclassified samples, which would almost certainly have constituted an over-discrimination between samples.
All the EmsB genotype profiles obtained for patients in this study had already been described in the EWET reference collection, and we obtained no entirely new profiles. Groups of patients living in the same geographic area presented identical or similar profiles. As highlighted by the individual research of similarity and mapping (Figure 6b, Table S4) [22,31], some of these profiles had already been described locally in animals (profiles P5, P6 and P9), as locally clustered among patients. Other profiles seemed to be widespread in foxes in Europe (profiles P2, P3, P7). This suggests two issues in contamination. These patients living in areas of high endemicity may have been contaminated in their residential environment, either with profiles circulating locally or with profiles more widespread within Europe. A similar pattern of profile mixtures and distributions has already been described in Europe [22]. Some profiles were widely distributed throughout Europe, whereas other profiles had more restricted local distributions. The European profiles G05, G21 and G23 [22] predominated numerically in previous studies and were highly widespread. In this study, samples of human origin in the profiles P1-P2-P3, P4-P5 and P7-P8, respectively, could be traced back to these profiles.
Overall, it was very complex to classify samples accurately to a given profile based on EmsB hierarchical clustering analysis, using only the dendrogram and a genetic threshold. This is due to the nature of the marker itself and to the UPGMA method used to cluster the samples, based on an arithmetic mean and the classification depending on the pre-existing similarity among the samples investigated or added to the analysis. However, despite the limitations of this method, it did make it possible to describe the diversity within a given set of samples. In our previous studies, based on the global shape of the EmsB electrophoregram (number and position of the peaks),“assemblages” were described [29] in which diversity was associated with different profiles. The application of this concept to the results obtained in this study resulted in the description of six assemblages: profiles P1-P2-P3 could be grouped into one assemblage, profiles P7-P8 into another one, and the profiles P4, P5, P6 and P9 represented four different assemblages. It seems interesting to focus on profiles or assemblages, depending on the question and the geographical scale taken into consideration.
Based on analyses of similarity between individuals and mapping, we were able to identify the samples most similar to the tested isolate. By contrast, the dendrogram represents the diversity between the present human samples by highlighting the different profiles existing within the collection. Profiles P4 and P5 were both similar to the European G21 profile. However, the distribution of the P5 profile and associated EWET reference samples seemed to be geographically more limited than the distribution of the numerically dominant profile P4 (Figure 6b), suggesting the possibility of a local profile drifting from a major profile. Based on hierarchical clustering analysis, the lesions of four patients could not be clustered with any other human AE human lesions in this specimen collection. However, searches for similarities between individual samples made it possible to match these samples with EWET reference samples from animals. This result highlights the importance of using two classification approaches (dendrogram based on hierarchical clustering analysis and searches for individual similarity based on sorted lists from distance matrix). More EmsB data should also be collected, particularly given that some of the profiles seem to be rare or did not match other samples in the dendrogram approach. The genetic diversity of EmsB in Europe is undoubtedly greater than currently thought using sequencing of few mitochondrial genes [13,14,15]. This study brings the number of genotyped parasite samples in the EmsB data collection to more than 1300.
Based on this large amount of data, we can now speculate, to some extent, on the conditions in which contamination occurs when hosts encounter parasites. Patients living in endemic areas repeatedly come into contact with locally circulating E. multilocularis isolates, but not necessarily with the numerically dominant profiles. The P8 profile, for example, was described in five patients living outside of areas of high endemicity. This profile corresponded to the previously described G23 profile, the second most prevalent profile in Europe [23]. It remains unclear why this profile grouped together most of the patients not living in endemic areas in France. The limits of the area of endemicity in France may need to be reconsidered. Nine patients presenting extrahepatic lesions presented four different profiles. One of these profiles, P4 accounted for three patients. It will be interesting to investigate in greater detail the association between specific profiles and specific organ locations as well as lesion numbers of the parasite in a larger sample of patients. The PNM system (P = parasitic mass in the liver, N = involvement of neighbouring organs, and M = metastasis) permits the clinical classification of alveolar echinococcosis [35,36] and it could be relevant to compare to EmsB profiles. Unfortunately, we only had available in the present study one third of the PNM data for the studied patients. Due to the lack of data we decided to deal with this subject in a future study.
Microsatellite DNA has a high mutation rate which is more difficult to assess for multilocus microsatellites, such as the EmsB marker. However, in this study certain profiles were detected in patients over a period of 30 years, as shown for the P4 profile. Locally, the P6 profile persisted over a period of 10 years and similar profiles were described in foxes. Despite the complex nature of EmsB, we gained insight into the apparent persistence of E. multilocularis EmsB profiles in the environment. However, EmsB analyses in the various definitive (i.e., foxes, raccoon dogs and domestic dogs) and intermediate hosts (including aberrant intermediate hosts such as primates, pigs and others) will be required to characterize the fluctuating spatiotemporal presence of E. multilocularis in more detail. A large whole-genome sequencing project for E. multilocularis specimens has also been proposed. Next-generation sequencing techniques could be used to obtain coding sequence data from the genomic DNA or mitochondrial genome, and non-coding DNA sequence data for microsatellites and transposons, from large collections of samples. Given the relatively low level of polymorphism observed among E. multilocularis specimens [15,37,38], studies of all the various types of DNA are likely to be required to elucidate the putative correlation between genetic diversity and potential pathogenicity in humans and animals.

4. Conclusions

The genetic diversity of E. multilocularis parasite isolates from European human AE patients was assessed for the first time with the highly polymorphic EmsB microsatellite marker. This genetic diversity was compared to the EWET collection of reference, mostly composed of parasite specimens from foxes. Patients living in a highly endemic area presented common EmsB profiles. These profiles were described in foxes in a limited geographical area for some of them or largely in Europe for others. Moreover, some EmsB profiles were described among patients over a period of 30 years. Thanks to this study, patients and animals were described as basically sharing the same EmsB profiles in Europe. Even if considered as an aberrant and dead-end host, this present work allowed us to document the indirect involvement or position of humans within the E. multilocularis parasite life cycle. With regards to these findings, one can speculate no intermediate host selection is achieved by the parasite strains.

5. Materials and Methods

5.1. Alveolar Echinococcosis Tissue Collection and DNA Extraction

An initial panel of 120 AE samples from surgery were collected between 1981 and 2019 and referred for PCR diagnosis of Echinococcus infection. The specimens were provided by the Henri Mondor Hospital (HMH, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (APHP), France), the Institute of Parasitology of Berne (IPA, Vetsuisse Faculty, Switzerland) and the National Reference Centre for Echinococcoses (NRC-E, Besançon University Hospital, France). A control outgroup was constituted from three more E. multilocularis samples—one from Hokkaido, Japan, (n=1), provided by the Asahikawa Medical University (Hokkaido, Japan), one from Alaska, United States (n=1), provided by the Institute of Parasitology of Berne, and one from China (n=1), provided by the Chrono-environment Laboratory (University of Bourgogne Franche-Comté (UBFC), France)—together with one E. granulosus sensu stricto sample (originating from an Algerian sheep) from the Chrono-environment Laboratory [21]. For the NCR-E collection, information about patients, such as place of residence and endemicity at this site, as well as change in residence and/or trips to other endemic areas, were obtained from the FrancEchino database (NRC-E).
Biological material was obtained for standard diagnosis on the basis of the physicians’ prescriptions. Data were rendered anonymous for analysis. For the ethic statement in this study, according to French Public Health Law [39], protocols of this type do not require approval from an ethics committee and are exempt from the requirement for formal informed consent.
At the IPA, DNA from AE lesions was purified with the QIAamp DNA Mini kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). At the NRC-E, DNA was purified with the High Pure PCR Template Preparation kit (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany). For FFPE, DNA was purified with the QIAamp DNA FFPE tissue kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions, at both institutions. At Henri Mondor Hospital, DNA was extracted from a collection of cysts, by cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) precipitation [16], as previously described [40].

5.2. PCR Conditions

For the Henri Mondor Hospital collection, PCR analyses were performed at the Institute of Genetics, University of Berne (IGB, Switzerland). For the IPA and NRC-E collections, PCR analyses were performed in the Chrono-environment Laboratory (France).
In the IGB laboratory, a single set of PCR conditions was applied to the DNA samples. The PCR mixture (final volume: 15 µL) contained 200 µM of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate (GeneAmp dNTPs; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA), 0.4 µM forward primer 5’-labeled with a specific fluorescent dye (EmsB A: 5‘-Fam-GTGTGGATGAGTGTGCCATC-3’), 0.7 µM classical reverse primer (EmsB C: 5’-CCACCTTCCCTACTG-CAATC-3’), and 0.5 U AmpliTaq DNA polymerase enzyme in GeneAmp 1X PCR buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.3, 50 mM KCl, 1.5 mM MgCl2, and 0.001% gelatin; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) and up to 50 ng of purified DNA (IGB conditions).
At the NRC-E, 5 different sets of PCR conditions were applied to four DNA samples (01-HP-102039-BE-Bru, 15-HP-061502-GE-Bw, 42-HP-122345-SW-Fr and BON-363-FR-39) as part of a quality control process for EmsB profile validation. Dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and various concentrations of primers were used to assess the stability of EmsB electrophoregrams (Table 4). The first PCR mixture had a final volume of 18 µl and contained the Multiplex PCR master mix with 2.8 U HotStarTaq DNA polymerase (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), 0.1 or 0.5 µM of each primer (final concentrations; EmsB A and EmsB C primers), 0% or 3% DMSO, and up to 50 ng of purified DNA (MLX conditions A to D). The second PCR mixture contained (in a final volume of 25 µL): 2 U Platinum Taq DNA polymerase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA), 1X PCR buffer, 0.2 mM of each dNTP (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA), 1.5 mM MgCl2, as recommended by the manufacturer, 0.2 µM of each primer (final concentration; EmsB A and EmsB C primers), 3% DMSO and up to 50 ng of purified DNA (PL conditions). Once the optimal MLX conditions had been defined, each sample from the IPA and NRC-E collections was tested in both the chosen MLX and PL conditions. For each run, the EmsB calibrator—a plasmid construct containing four EmsB microsatellites—was used to check and compare FSA reliability [32]. The PCR conditions used are summarized in Table 5.
All PCRs were performed with a Biometra T3 thermocycler (Whatman Biometra, Göttingen, Germany).
FSA was performed with fluorescently labeled PCR products by capillary electrophoresis on an ABI PRISM 3100 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) for the Henri Mondor collection and on an Applied Biosystems 3130 Genetic Analyzer for the IPA and NRC-E collections. Electrophoregrams were analyzed with GeneMapper 4.1 (Life Technologies, CA, USA).

5.3. Hierarchical Clustering Analysis

With the FSA technique, the electrophoregrams for the EmsB target are presented as a series of peaks corresponding to alleles [18,20]. The presence or absence of peaks and the heights of the associated fluorescence intensity peaks were recorded as previously described [32]. These data were used to assess the genetic diversity of the parasite and to establish profiles by hierarchical clustering analysis using Euclidean distance and the unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) [41]. A multiscale bootstrap resampling (B = 1000) was performed to assess the stability of the clusters, resulting in approximately unbiased p-values [42,43]. Clustering analyses were performed with RStudio software (R version 3.5.1) [44] and the pvclust package [45]. The genetic distance threshold previously reported by Knapp and co-workers [21] and applied to the dendrogram to describe clusters or profiles in collections of samples was challenged here. The original threshold was obtained by calculating the mean (x) genetic distance between three samples from a single strain maintained in vivo by three successive transperitoneal inoculations in Meriones unguiculatus, plus 3 standard deviations (σ) according to the formula x + 3 σ, giving a genetic distance threshold of 0.08. This threshold calculation was modified (x + 4 σ), yielding a genetic distance threshold of 0.1. This modification was applied to the assessment of genetic diversity in E. multilocularis to reduce the likelihood of over-discrimination by this method on samples stored in different conditions, obtained on different dates and processed with different machines. MLX and PL conditions were compared by using the resulting FSA to generate a first dendrogram. The Euclidean distance between the two conditions was checked to assess the stability of the FSA obtained from EmsB PCR products. With the best conditions, a dendrogram with E. multilocularis human cases only was generated for a better graphic rendering.

5.4. EWET Collection of Reference and Individual Research of Similarity

The EmsB genotyping results obtained for these AE patient lesions were compared to data referenced in database of the EmsB Website for the Echinococcus typing project (EWET project) [32], for 1211 genotyped EmsB samples from 13 European countries, isolated from adult worms (fox, cat, and raccoon dog hosts) and metacestodes (human, monkey, and rodent hosts) (Figure 6a and Table 6) [18,21,22,23,26,27,29,46,47]. Patients and EWET reference data were mapped with Quantum GIS software version 3.6.0 (QGIS, Open Source Geospatial Foundation Project. http://qgis.osgeo.org), and Eurostat map bases (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/fr/web/gisco/geodata/reference-data/administrative-units-statistical-units/countries). Our samples were compared with the data collection to check for individual similarities. The most similar EWET reference samples can be obtained with R software as a sorted list, following EmsB Guidelines section VII [32]. The geographic distribution of the EWET reference samples associated with a tested patient sample was represented with QGIS.

5.5. Interlaboratory Control Test

The EmsB data were generated by two laboratories. We therefore checked the reproducibility of the technique between the two laboratories. Fourteen E. multilocularis worms from three foxes studied in the EchinoRisk project [22] were analyzed at the two laboratories (PAHO5-117 to 120 from a German fox, UCPR1-495 to 499 from a Czech fox, and 16PL-375 to 379 from a Polish fox) under the PCR conditions described above (AmpliTaq PCR mixture in the IGB and MLX and PL best conditions in the NRC-E), and the FSA data were compared by Euclidean distance calculation.

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0817/9/4/282/s1, Table S1: Euclidean distance matrix for 5 patients tested (1HP: 1-HP-102039-BE-Bru; BON: BON-363-FR-39; 15HP: 15-HP-061502-GE-Bw; 42HP: 42-HP-122345-SW-Fr), for the MLX-A to D and PL PCR conditions and FSA, Table S2: Euclidean distance matrix for 66 isolates tested in MLX-A and PL PCR conditions and by FSA, Table S3: Euclidean distance matrix for the 14 EchinoRisk worms tested (PAHO5-117 to 120 from a German fox, UCPR1-495 to 499 from a Czech fox, and 16PL-375 to 379 from a Polish fox) from the IPA, in MLX-A and PL conditions and by FSA, Table S4: Individual similarities between the 66 tested isolates and EWET reference data, and by country of origin, Figure S1: Dendrogram constructed from EmsB amplification data obtained under MLX-A and PL PCR conditions and by FSA for the 66 patient isolates tested, based on hierarchical clustering analysis (Euclidean distance and unweighted pair group method).

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, J.K.; formal analysis, J.K., funding acquisition, B.G., L.M., investigation, J.K., B.G., S.B., C.R., S.B.-H.; methodology, J.K., G.U., J.-M.B.; project administration, B.G., L.M.; resources: B.G., S.B., L.M.; supervision: L.M., B.G; writing—original draft preparation, J.K., writing—review and editing, B.G, S.B., J.-M.B., G.U., S.B.-H., C.R., L.M. All authors have read and approved the submitted version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was funded by the National Reference Centre for Echinococcosis funds, and the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant no. 31003A 16108/1).

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank M. Liance for initiating this work. We also thank J.C. Dalphin, F. Grenouillet, B. Heyd, G. Mantion, P. Manzoni, R. Piarroux, D.A. Vuitton, L. Vuitton, from the University Hospital Centre (UHC) of Besançon-Jean Minjoz, J.L. Letoublon, D. Polack, from UHC of Grenoble, R. Kovacs from the Hospital Nord-Franche-Comté, E. Lafont from APHP-Georges Pompidou, O. Oddeux from the Hospital of Bethune, D. Sommacale from the UHC of Reims-Robert Debré, P. Millet from the UHC of Bordeaux-Pellegrin, N. Mansouri from the UHC of Nancy-Brabois, G. Beldi from the Hospital of Berne-Insel, P. Deplazes, N. Müller from the Universities of Zürich and Berne for providing E. multilocularis isolates, and M.C. Humbertjean for documentation. We thank A. Joriot and C. Drögemüller for microsatellite data. We dedicate this paper to Jean-Charles Dalphin.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.

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Figure 1. Electrophoregrams for genotyping performed on four human alveolar echinococcosis (AE) samples for the four Multiplex mixture conditions (MLX-A to D) and the Platinum mixture (PL).
Figure 1. Electrophoregrams for genotyping performed on four human alveolar echinococcosis (AE) samples for the four Multiplex mixture conditions (MLX-A to D) and the Platinum mixture (PL).
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Figure 2. Electrophoregrams for the genotyping performed on 14 EchinoRisk samples from three foxes in Multiplex PCR master mix (Qiagen) conditions (MLX A to D) and Platinum Taq DNA polymerase mixture (Invitrogen) conditions (PL) at the Besançon Laboratory (NRC-E) and in AmpliTaq DNA polymerase mixture (Applied Biosystems) conditions at the Berne Laboratory (IPA). The arrows indicate the 2 bp shift observed between the results obtained with the ABI PRISM 3100 Genetic Analyzer and the Applied Biosystems 3130 Genetic Analyzer.
Figure 2. Electrophoregrams for the genotyping performed on 14 EchinoRisk samples from three foxes in Multiplex PCR master mix (Qiagen) conditions (MLX A to D) and Platinum Taq DNA polymerase mixture (Invitrogen) conditions (PL) at the Besançon Laboratory (NRC-E) and in AmpliTaq DNA polymerase mixture (Applied Biosystems) conditions at the Berne Laboratory (IPA). The arrows indicate the 2 bp shift observed between the results obtained with the ABI PRISM 3100 Genetic Analyzer and the Applied Biosystems 3130 Genetic Analyzer.
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Figure 3. Dendrogram constructed from EmsB amplification data by hierarchical clustering analysis (Euclidean distance and unweighted pair group method). Approximately unbiased (au) p-values are indicated at tree nodes as percentages calculated by multiscale bootstrapping (B = 1000). E. granulosus sensu stricto (G1 strain, originating from an Algerian sheep), and three E. multilocularis from Alaska (ALK-SLI), Japan (JAP-I3J-R) and China (CHI-7PRC-r) were used as control outgroups. A genetic distance threshold of 0.1 was used to distinguish EmsB profiles. A representative EmsB electrophoregram is provided for each profile.
Figure 3. Dendrogram constructed from EmsB amplification data by hierarchical clustering analysis (Euclidean distance and unweighted pair group method). Approximately unbiased (au) p-values are indicated at tree nodes as percentages calculated by multiscale bootstrapping (B = 1000). E. granulosus sensu stricto (G1 strain, originating from an Algerian sheep), and three E. multilocularis from Alaska (ALK-SLI), Japan (JAP-I3J-R) and China (CHI-7PRC-r) were used as control outgroups. A genetic distance threshold of 0.1 was used to distinguish EmsB profiles. A representative EmsB electrophoregram is provided for each profile.
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Figure 4. Distribution of the EmsB profiles described for human AE lesions in the countries studied (a), and French endemic Région profiles (b). TDB: Territoire de Belfort; Ct.: Canton; G. Ct.: Canton of Geneva.
Figure 4. Distribution of the EmsB profiles described for human AE lesions in the countries studied (a), and French endemic Région profiles (b). TDB: Territoire de Belfort; Ct.: Canton; G. Ct.: Canton of Geneva.
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Figure 5. Distribution over time, from 1986 to 2018, of the nine EmsB profiles (P1 to P9) for the 63 alveolar echinococcosis patients genotyped.
Figure 5. Distribution over time, from 1986 to 2018, of the nine EmsB profiles (P1 to P9) for the 63 alveolar echinococcosis patients genotyped.
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Figure 6. Distribution of the 66 AE human samples and the 1211 EWET (EmsB Website for Echinococcus Typing) reference data (a), and graphical representation of the EmsB profiles described for human AE lesions and similar EWET reference data selected on the basis of a Euclidean distance of less than 0.1 to the tested samples (b).
Figure 6. Distribution of the 66 AE human samples and the 1211 EWET (EmsB Website for Echinococcus Typing) reference data (a), and graphical representation of the EmsB profiles described for human AE lesions and similar EWET reference data selected on the basis of a Euclidean distance of less than 0.1 to the tested samples (b).
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Table 1. Euclidean distances between genotyping results for four human AE samples obtained by PCR in Multiplex mixture conditions (MLX A to D) and Platinum mixture conditions (PL).
Table 1. Euclidean distances between genotyping results for four human AE samples obtained by PCR in Multiplex mixture conditions (MLX A to D) and Platinum mixture conditions (PL).
MLX/PL1HP-PLBON-PL15HP-PL42HP-PL
1HP-MLX-A0.0518
1HP-MLX-B0.0684
1HP-MLX-C0.0706
1HP-MLX-D0.0769
BON-MLX-A 0.0488
BON-MLX-B 0.0548
BON-MLX-C 0.0524
BON-MLX-D 0.0637
15HP-MLX-A 0.0829
15HP-MLX-B 0.1036
15HP-MLX-C 0.1024
15HP-MLX-D 0.1050
42HP-MLX-A 0.0618
42HP-MLX-B 0.0737
42HP-MLX-C 0.0752
42HP-MLX-D 0.0966
SD0.01070.00630.01040.0145
Samples 1HP: 1-HP-102039-BE-Bru; BON: BON-363-FR-39; 15HP: 15-HP-061502-GE-Bw; 42HP: 42-HP-122345-SW-Fr.
Table 2. Human alveolar echinococcosis panel and main characteristics.
Table 2. Human alveolar echinococcosis panel and main characteristics.
CodePanelCountryPlace of ResidenceOrgan of OriginType of Biological MaterialYear of SurgeryAge at SurgerySexEmsB ProfileLiving in EndemicareaMoved to Endemic RégionTrip to Endemic Région
01-HP-102039-BE-BruIPABelgiumBrussels Hoofdstedelijk GewestNDFFPE201075MP1YesNDND
04-SB-123-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Amancey Ct.Liver tissueFresh198661FP3YesNo moveNo trip
06-SB-289-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Pierrefontaine-les-V. Ct.Liver tissueFresh198858MP5YesNDND
10-SB-125-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Saint-Hippolyte Ct.Liver tissueFresh198665MoutYesNo moveNo trip
11-SB-209-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Pierrefontaine-les-V. Ct.Liver tissueFresh198855FP9YesNo moveND
13-SB-HFE-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Haute-Saône Dép., Besançon Ct.Liver tissueFresh198815FP4YesNDND
14-SB-164-FR-39 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Jura Dép., Lons-le-Saunier Ct.Liver tissueFresh198738MP3YesYesNo
16-SB-154-FR-70 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Haute-Saône Dép., Luxeuil-les-Bains Ct.Liver tissueFresh198763FP4YesNDND
17-HP-354-FR-74IPAFranceARA Région, Hte-Savoie Dép., Saint-Julien-en-G. Ct.Liver tissueFresh200361FP1YesYesYes
17-SB-487-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Roulans Ct.Liver tissueFresh198763MP4YesNo moveND
18-SB-230-FR-70 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Haute-Saône Dép., Héricourt-Est Ct.Liver tissueFresh198624FP4YesNo moveyes
19-SB-244-FR-39 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Jura Dép., Champagnole Ct.NDFresh198854MP3YesNo moveNo trip
21-SB-253-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Maîche Ct.NDFresh198844MP5YesNo moveNo trip
22_SB-239-FR-01 3HMHFranceARA Région, Ain Dép., Oyonnax-Sud Ct.Liver tissueFresh198852MP1YesNo moveNo
23-SB-274-FR-70 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Haute-Saône Dép., Fresne-Saint-M. Ct.Liver tissueFresh198636FP4YesNo moveNo trip
24-SB-251-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Pierrefontaine-les-V. Ct.Liver tissueFresh198953FP2YesNo moveNo trip
25-SB-94-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Quingey Ct.NDFresh198951MP3YesNDND
29-SB-FR-25 3HMHFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép.Liver tissueFresh198958FP2YesNDND
AND-735-FR-90UHCBFranceBFC Région, Territoire-de-Belfort Dép., Delle Ct.Extrahepat. MassFresh201771MP1YesNo moveNo trip
AND-826-FR-51UHCBFranceGrand-Est Région, Ardennes Dép., Château-PorcienLiver tissueFresh201836MP8YesYesYes
BAR-478-FR-88UHCBFranceGrand-Est Région, Vosges Dép., Le Val-d’Ajol Ct.Liver tissueFresh201036FP7YesYesYes
BAY-366-FR-39UHCBFranceBFC Région, Jura Dép., Lons-le-Saunier Ct.Liver tissueFresh200567MP9YesNo moveYes
BES-448-FR-39UHCBFranceBFC Région, Jura Dép., Moirans-en-Montagne Ct.Liver tissueFresh201068MP4YesNo moveYes
BON-363-FR-39UHCBFranceBFC Région, Jura Dép., Arbois Ct.Liver tissueFresh200622MP5YesNo moveYes
CHA-792-FR-39UHCBFranceBFC Région, Jura Dép., Authume Ct.Liver tissueFresh201863MP8YesYesYes
CHI-781-FR-75UHCBFranceIle-de-France Région, Paris Dép.Bone tissueFresh201767FP8NoYesNo
COU-427-FR-70UHCBFranceBFC Région, Haute-Saône Dép., Luxeuil-les-Bains Ct.Liver tissueFresh201041MP4YesNo moveYes
CUR-829-FR-64UHCBFranceNA Région, Pyrénées-Atlantiques Dép., Bayonne Ct.Diaphragm Fresh201869MP8NoNoYes
DAV-655-FR-70UHCBFranceBFC Région, Haute-Saône Dép., Mélisey Ct.Liver tissueFresh201765FP4YesNDND
DUP-749-FR-74UHCBFranceARA Région, Haute-Savoie Dép., Sciez Ct.Liver tissueFresh201770MP8YesNo moveYes
FAR-780-FR-25UHCBFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Maîche Ct.Lung tissueFresh201772FP4YesNo moveNo trip
FRO-475-FR-25UHCBFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Baumes-les-Dames Ct.Liver tissueFresh201053FP4YesNo moveNo trip
GAN-766-FR-74UHCBFranceARA Région, Haute-Savoie Dép., La Roche-sur-F. Ct.Liver tissueFresh201828FP8YesNDND
GAU-371-FR-12UHCBFranceOccitanie Régions, Aveyron Dép., Raspes-et-L. Ct.Liver tissueFresh200731MP8NoNo moveNo
GOU-403-FR-08UHCBFranceGrand-Est Région, Ardennes Dép., Carignan Ct.Liver tissueFresh200924MP8YesNo moveNo trip
GRA-376-FR-25UHCBFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Valdahon Ct.Liver tissueFresh200673MP4YesYesYes
MEN-404-FR-70UHCBFranceBFC Région, Haute-Saône Dép., Mélisey Ct.Liver tissueFresh200772FP8YesNo moveNo trip
POB-410-FR-25UHCBFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Pontarlier Ct.Liver tissueFresh200873MP9YesYesYes
PRE-779-FR-90UHCBFranceBFC Région, Territoire-de-Belfort Dép., Bavilliers Ct.Liver tissueFresh201780MP4YesNDND
ROB-375-FR-25UHCBFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Bavans Ct.Liver tissueFresh200659FP9YesNo moveNo trip
SAL-491-FR-54UHCBFranceGrand-Est Région, Meurthe-et-M. Dép., Haroué Ct.Bone tissueFresh201974MoutYesYesNo trip
SCA-379-FR-25UHCBFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Ornans Ct.Liver tissueFresh200668MP3YesNo moveYes
SCO-191-FR-01UHCBFranceARA Région, Ain Dép., Saint-Etienne-du-Bois Ct.Liver tissueFresh198758FP4YesNDND
VER-796-FR-62UHCBFranceHDF Région, Pas-de-Calais Dép., Béthune Ct.Liver tissueFFPE201864FP4NoNo moveNo trip
VUI-763-FR-70UHCBFranceBFC Région, Haute-Saône Dép., Lure Ct.Liver tissueFresh201768FP7YesNDND
VUI-800-FR-25UHCBFranceBFC Région, Doubs Dép., Maîche Ct.Splenic lesionFresh201869FP4YesNo moveYes
08-HP-081794-GE-BwIPAGermanyBaden-Württemberg Land, Freiburg DistrictLiver tissueFFPE200855FP4YesNDND
09-HP-081788-GE-BwIPAGermanyBaden-Württemberg Land, Freiburg DistrictLiver tissueFFPE200864MP4YesNDND
15-HP-061502-GE-BwIPAGermanyBaden-Württemberg Land, Freiburg DistrictLiver tissueFFPE200676FP4YesNDND
34-HP-122282-GE-Ber 1IPAGermanyBerlin LandLiver tissueFFPE201233MP1YesNDND
35-HP-122285-GE-Ber 1IPAGermanyBerlin LandLiver tissueFresh2012 P1YesNDND
02-HP-102007-SW-GeIPASwitzerlandGeneva Ct.Liver tissueFresh201023MP6YesNDND
09-SB-SW-ZuHMHSwitzerlandZürich Ct.NDFresh1981NDNDoutYesNDND
11-HP-071662-SW-BeIPASwitzerlandBerne Ct.Liver tissueFresh200778FP6YesNDND
14-HP-071575-SW-FrIPASwitzerlandFribourg Ct.Liver tissueFresh200777FP9YesNDND
16-HP-031207-SW-VdIPASwitzerlandVaud Ct.Liver tissueFresh200334MP9YesNDND
18-HP-031199-SW-VdIPASwitzerlandVaud Ct.Liver tissueFresh200361FP9YesNDND
19-HP-021164-SW-VdIPASwitzerlandVaud Ct.Liver tissueFresh200343FP6YesNDND
27-HP-112218-SW-VsIPASwitzerlandValais Ct.Liver tissueFresh201169MP1YesNDND
28-HP-112233-SW-BeIPASwitzerlandBerne Ct.Brain tissueFresh201141MP4YesNDND
37-HP-122318-SW-FrIPASwitzerlandFribourg Ct.Muscle tissueFresh201259FP6YesNDND
38-HP-122344-SW-Fr 2IPASwitzerlandFribourg Ct.Bone tissueFresh201264FP6YesNDND
40-HP-122343-SW-Fr 2IPASwitzerlandFribourg Ct.Bone tissueFresh2012 P6YesNDND
42-HP-122345-SW-Fr 2IPASwitzerlandFribourg Ct.Bone tissueFresh2012 P6YesNDND
43-HP-132501-SW-FrIPASwitzerlandFribourg Ct.Liver tissueFresh201355MoutYesNDND
46-HP-142799-SW-FrIPASwitzerlandFribourg Ct.NDFFPE201459FP6YesNDND
1,2 sample from the same patient; 3 patients genotyped with the U1snRNA marker by Bretagne et co-workers in 1996; IPA: Institute of Parasitology, Berne, Switzerland; HMH: Henri Mondor Hospital, Paris, France; UHCB: University Hospital Centre, Besançon, France; ARA: Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes; BFC: Bourgogne Franche-Comté; HDF: Hauts-de-France; NA: Nouvelle-Aquitaine; Dép.: Département; Ct.: Canton; FFPE: formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded; ND: no data.
Table 3. Euclidean distances for genotyping results for 14 EchinoRisk samples obtained from three foxes, in Multiplex PCr master mix (Qiagen) conditions (MLX A) and Platinum Taq polymerase mixture (Invitrogen) conditions (PL) at the Chrono-environment Laboratory (NRC-E), and in AmpliTaq DNA polymerase mixture (Applied Biosystems) conditions at the Institute of Genetics of Berne (IGB).
Table 3. Euclidean distances for genotyping results for 14 EchinoRisk samples obtained from three foxes, in Multiplex PCr master mix (Qiagen) conditions (MLX A) and Platinum Taq polymerase mixture (Invitrogen) conditions (PL) at the Chrono-environment Laboratory (NRC-E), and in AmpliTaq DNA polymerase mixture (Applied Biosystems) conditions at the Institute of Genetics of Berne (IGB).
IGB vs. NRC-E16PL_MLX16PL_PLUCPR1_MLXUCPR1_PLPAHO5_MLXPAHO5_PL
16PL_3750.05630.0473
16PL_3760.05890.0477
16PL_3770.05400.0415
16PL_3780.05120.0429
16PL_3790.05400.0471
UCPR1_495 0.06570.0669
UCPR1_496 0.06530.0643
UCPR1_497 0.05750.0634
UCPR1_498 0.05820.0632
UCPR1_499 0.13950.0838
PAHO5_117 0.02850.0344
PAHO5_118 0.02140.0277
PAHO5_119 0.04130.0344
PAHO5_120 0.02640.0306
SD0.00280.00280.03500.00870.00840.0032
Table 4. PCR mixture and conditions for quality control.
Table 4. PCR mixture and conditions for quality control.
PolymeraseDMSOPrimersConditions
HotStarTaq (MLX)3%0.1 µMA
0.5 µMB
0%0.1 µMC
0.5 µMD
Platinum (PL)3%0.2 µME
Table 5. PCR conditions for the three protocols applied.
Table 5. PCR conditions for the three protocols applied.
EmsB-AmpliTaqEmsB-MultiplexEmsB-Platinum
PCR StepSampleSampleCalibratorSampleCalibrator
1-pre-amplification94 °C13 min95 °C15 min95 °C15 min94 °C2 min94 °C2 min
2-denaturation94 °C30 s94 °C30 s94 °C30 s94 °C30 s94 °C30 s
3-hybridization60 °C30 s60 °C90 s60 °C90 s60 °C30 s60 °C30 s
4-elongation72 °C60 s72 °C60 s72 °C30 s72 °C60 s72 °C60 s
5-final elongation60 °C45 min60 °C30 min60 °C30 min60 °C45 min60 °C45 min
Steps 2 to 4X45X40X25X45X25
Table 6. Country, host and number of EWET reference samples used for genetic comparison.
Table 6. Country, host and number of EWET reference samples used for genetic comparison.
Echinococcus Multilocularis Host
CountryFoxHumanRodentCatMonkeyRaccoon dogTotal
France55410100556
Switzerland84811050108
Austria981000099
Poland950000095
Germany881000089
Czech Republic670000067
Slovakia630000063
Denmark380000038
Sweden340000034
Norway002700027
Italy170000017
Estonia000001111
In vivo culture0050005
Netherlands2000002
Total1140114315111211

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MDPI and ACS Style

Knapp, J.; Gottstein, B.; Bretagne, S.; Bart, J.-M.; Umhang, G.; Richou, C.; Bresson-Hadni, S.; Millon, L. Genotyping Echinococcus multilocularis in Human Alveolar Echinococcosis Patients: An EmsB Microsatellite Analysis. Pathogens 2020, 9, 282. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens9040282

AMA Style

Knapp J, Gottstein B, Bretagne S, Bart J-M, Umhang G, Richou C, Bresson-Hadni S, Millon L. Genotyping Echinococcus multilocularis in Human Alveolar Echinococcosis Patients: An EmsB Microsatellite Analysis. Pathogens. 2020; 9(4):282. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens9040282

Chicago/Turabian Style

Knapp, Jenny, Bruno Gottstein, Stéphane Bretagne, Jean-Mathieu Bart, Gérald Umhang, Carine Richou, Solange Bresson-Hadni, and Laurence Millon. 2020. "Genotyping Echinococcus multilocularis in Human Alveolar Echinococcosis Patients: An EmsB Microsatellite Analysis" Pathogens 9, no. 4: 282. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens9040282

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