Introduction

The genus Strongyloides comprises more than 50 obligate gastrointestinal parasitic nematode species that infect wild animal including birds, reptiles, amphibians, and mammals, as well as humans, livestock, and companion animals1, 2. In humans, two species are known to cause infection: S. stercoralis (Bavay 1876) and S. fuelleborni (consisting of two subspecies, S. fuelleborni fuelleborni (Von Linstow 1905) and S. fuelleborni kellyi (Viney 1991). While S. stercoralis has a cosmopolitan distribution, mainly in tropical and sub-tropical regions, human infection with S. fuelleborni fuelleborni only occurs sporadically in Africa. S. fuelleborni kellyi was once considered a subspecies of S. fuelleborni fuelleborni based on morphological resemblances3 together with results of an isoenzyme electrophoretic study4, although more recent molecular phylogenetic analyses do not support this subspecies relationship5. So far, human infections with S. fuelleborni kellyi have been reported only in Papua New Guinea6.

In dogs, S. stercoralis and S. planiceps are two major species known to cause infections. The first attempt to distinguish human and dog isolates of S. stercoralis by molecular analysis was carried out by Ramachandran et al.7 using PCR-RFLP on the 28S rDNA locus7. The results showed different RFLP patterns between the two host isolates, although only four human and one dog isolate were used. Later, Hasegawa et al.8 reported a polymorphism in the 18S rDNA gene between two human and five dog isolates of S. stercoralis in comparison with other Strongyloides spp8. The polymorphism is in the HVR-I region, one of four “hyper-variable” regions identified in the 18S rDNA locus8. (Note: Hasegawa’s nomenclature to designate hyper-variable regions on the S. stercoralis 18S rDNA gene differs from the more widely used system to mark hyper-variable regions (V1 to V9) on eukaryote 18S rDNA genes)9. The nature of the HVR-I polymorphism observed between isolates of S. stercoralis is a single base insertion/deletion (indel) that results in a stretch of either four or five thymidine nucleotides within the HVR-I region (4T or 5T alleles). In their study, all dog isolates possessed the 4T/4T genotype, while two human isolates displayed the 5T/5T genotype. Recently, Hasegawa et al.10 also showed that S. stercoralis isolates from humans, chimpanzees, and dogs can be grouped into dog-parasitic and primate-parasitic clades using the mitochondrial Cox1 gene as a genetic marker from human (n = 5), chimpanzee (n = 2), and dog isolates (n = 2)10. The first report to determine worm genotypes at a population level were conducted in Cambodia by Schar et al.11, in which 18S rDNA was used as a marker11. Interestingly, 4T/4T genotypes were found in seven out of 29 human hosts (dogs were not included in the study). Thus, although lines of evidence suggest that some degree of genetic differentiation between human and dog isolates already exists, the usefulness of the HVR-I polymorphism to distinguish human and dog strains still needs verification. From a public health point of view, it is important to know the degree of cross-transmission of dog-adapted isolates to humans.

To gain a better understanding of the phylogenetic relationships among S. stercoralis isolates infecting humans and dogs, and to assess their zoonotic potential, we collected S. stercoralis samples mainly from Myanmar, where strongyloidiasis is endemic in both humans and dogs. We analyzed mitochondrial Cox1, nuclear 18S rDNA, 28S rDNA, and the major sperm protein domain-containing protein gene (MSP gene, hereafter), and found that S. stercoralis consists of two genetically distinct lineages.

Results

Cox1 haplotypes

Cox1 sequences from 571 Strongyloides worms isolated from 159 hosts were collapsed into 100 haplotypes. The average pairwise distances of nucleotide sequences (711 bp) and translated amino acid sequences (237 positions) among the haplotypes were 0.036 (range, 0.001–0.079) and 0.003 (range, 0–0.025), respectively (Supplementary Tables S1 and S2).

A maximum-likelihood tree was constructed to assess the phylogenetic relationships between these haplotypes (Fig. 1). Two distinct groups were observed. The first group (clade I) consisted of all human-derived worms and some dog-derived worms. In contrast, the second group (clade II) was composed solely of dog-derived worms collected in Myanmar. Subdivisions among clade I haplotypes were also observed (clade Ia–e). Clade Ia was mostly composed of Southeast Asian human isolates (Myanmar, Thailand, and Laos) together with one Myanmar dog-derived isolate and Ugandan human-derived isolate. Clade Ib was composed of human-derived isolates from 5 countries (Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Japan, and Central Africa) and dog isolates from Myanmar and Japan. Clade Ic was composed of human isolates from Myanmar, Laos, and Japan, and dog isolates from Myanmar. It contained all of the Japanese human isolates except for one isolate from Hokkaido (HKD) that was grouped into clade Ib (H010). It is of note that clade Ic was supported by a relatively weak bootstrap value (61%). Clade Id was a relatively small clade containing Southeast Asian human-derived (Thailand and Laos) and Myanmar dog-derived isolates. Clade Ie was also a small group containing two Japanese dog-derived haplotypes and human-derived haplotypes from Laos and Thailand.

Figure 1
figure 1

Maximum-likelihood tree built for Strongyloides isolates using a portion of the mitochondrial Cox1 gene. MEGA7 software was used to build the tree using a dataset of Cox1 (710 bp) gene haplotypes based on the Tamura-Nei model. Two/Three-letter codes next to the haplotype number indicate haplotypes from the respective hosts. Numbers at nodes indicate percent bootstrap values generated from 500 replicates. Scale bar denotes 0.02 changes per nucleotide site.

The same dataset was used to construct a Median-joining phylogenetic network (Fig. 2). In the case of clade Ia, a core haplotype (H011) was surrounded by other haplotypes. H011 was the most prevalent haplotype in both Myanmar and Laos. In other clades, less prominent core haplotypes were observed that included H036, H025, H061, H074, and H079. Of 116 worms from 36 dog hosts, 38 worms from 11 dog hosts possessed Cox1 haplotypes belonging to clade I (Figs 1 and 2). These 38 worms were typed to have one of the following nine Cox1 haplotypes (clade Ia: H092; clade Ib: H009, H017, H036; clade Ic: H082, H093; clade Id: H044; clade Ie: H006, H063). H017, H036, and H044 were shared by human isolates. H092, H082, H093, H063, and H006 were distinctively found in dogs. The difference from the closest haplotypes found in human isolates was minimal, with only one or two nucleotide changes (Fig. 2). Nevertheless, 33 out of 34 Cox1-clade I worms from canine hosts had the 4T/4T 18S HVR-I genotype (Table 1), indicating these isolates may not be human-adapted (described below).

Figure 2
figure 2

Median-joining haplotype network for the mitochondrial Cox1 gene. Each circle represents one haplotype. The size of the circle represents the number of hosts that harbor the given haplotype. The color inside the circle indicates the host species/geographical origin (country). Numbers beside the branches indicate the number of mutational steps between haplotypes (no number is shown in case of a single-step difference). Branch lengths are roughly proportional to the number of mutational steps.

Table 1 18S rDNA hyper-variable region I (HVR-I) genotypes of Strongyloides worms isolated from humans and dogs.

18S rDNA 458T/A polymorphism and HVR-I genotypes

Within the 333-bp region that we used for nematode species identification, one polymorphic site was identified at position 458 of the reference (AF279916). This is the same polymorphism reported in a S. stercoralis population from humans in Cambodia11. The genotypes of this polymorphism were determined for all 521 samples that we collected. Among them, virtually all Myanmar and Thai worms possessed genotype T/T, regardless of the host (Table 2), with five exceptions. The five worms were isolated from three HIV-positive patients recruited at Mingaladon Specialist Hospital (MGD) with CD4-positive T lymphocyte counts of 10, 27, and 52 cells/μL. All Japanese isolates carried genotype A/A regardless of the host species, with one exception. That one isolate was from a human host in Hokkaido (HKD) and had a heterozygous genotype (T/A).

Table 2 Genotypes of 18S rDNA 458T/A polymorphism

A single-base insertion/deletion that results in either a stretch of four or five thymidine nucleotides within the 18S rDNA HVR-I gives rise to ‘4T’ or ‘5T’ alleles. The HVR-I genotypes were determined for 471 out of 521 samples (370 human isolates and 101 dog isolates). In humans, 94.5% (351 out of 370) of the isolated Strongyloides worms bore the HVR-I genotype 5T/5T. In stark contrast, virtually all (99.0%, 100 out of 101) worms from dogs carried genotype 4T/4T (Table 1). The minor 4T/5T and 4T/4T genotypes were found in four and seven humans, respectively. In this calculation, the host number was counted twice if a single host produced S. stercoralis with two different genotypes. Thus, the actual number of humans who were the hosts of either genotype 4T/5T or 4T/4T was eight (not the sum of four and seven). For these eight human hosts, we looked at the genotypes of individual worms from the same host (Table 3). We noticed that worm populations from these human hosts were always mixtures of either 5T/5T + 4T/5T, 5T/5T + 4T/4T, or 5T/5T + 4T/5T + 4T/4T. We did not see any human case where only 4T/4T genotypes were found. In six of the eight subjects (Table 3), all worms from the same host shared the same Cox1 haplotype, even if their HVR-I genotypes differed.

Table 3 18S rDNA hyper-variable region I (HVR-I) genotypes of individual Strongyloides worms from selected human hosts.

28S rDNA haplotypes

A portion of the 28S rDNA gene (733–736 bp in length, depending on the isolate) was successfully obtained from 311 isolates from 86 hosts. Twelve haplotypes were identified. The phylogenetic relationships between haplotypes are shown in Fig. 3. One distinct clade (bootstrap value, 84%) comprising H6–H12 was formed. All human isolates belonged to this clade, and all isolates typed as Cox1 clade I belonged to this clade, with one exception (Table 4). This exception was an isolate from a Myanmar dog, and was typed as Cox1 clade Ib and 28S rDNA haplotype H3. Haplotype H10 was the most predominant haplotype, accounting for 60.5% (188 out of 311) of the all isolates (Table 5). This haplotype was not only the most prevalent among humans in Myanmar and Thailand, but also the only haplotype found in all four countries studied (Myanmar, Thailand, Japan, and Uganda).

Figure 3
figure 3

Neighbor-joining tree built for Strongyloides isolates using a portion of the nuclear 28S rDNA gene. MEGA7 software was used to build the tree using a dataset of 28S rDNA (743 nucleotide positions) gene haplotypes based on the Tamura-Nei model. A square depicted by a dashed line indicates a distinct clade, composed of haplotypes H6–H12. Letters inside the brackets indicate the Cox1 clade to which each isolate belongs with respect to the 28S rDNA haplotype of each sample.

Table 4 28S rDNA haplotypes identified in humans and dogs.
Table 5 28S rDNA haplotypes identified in S. stercoralis isolated from humans or dogs.

MSP gene haplotypes

The nuclear-protein–coding gene MSP, has been used in nematode molecular systematics studies12. Our preliminary database search of the S. stercoralis genome identified at least three MSP genes, SSTP_0000560400.1, SSTP_0000955200.1, and SSTP_0000122000.1, with predicted gene products of 127, 127, and 575 amino acids, respectively. Although these reference sequences had not been registered in the NCBI protein database at the time of this writing, they were available through the WormBase Parasite (parasite.wormbase.org). The first two genes showed a high level of homology with each other at the nucleotide level (91% identical), and were not used in the present study to avoid potential problems associated with analyzing paralogous sequences. As a result, we chose SSTP_0000122000.1 for our study.

We selected 31 samples (16 human-derived and 15 dog-derived), for phylogenetic analysis of the MSP gene. The sample selection was made arbitrarily to make the selected samples represent the observed diversity of the Cox1 haplotypes described above. Base on the maximum-likelihood tree, they were grouped into three clades (Fig. 4). All human isolates grouped as Cox1 clade I belonged to MSP clade I, while all dog isolates grouped as Cox1 clade II belonged to MSP clade III. Interestingly, all three isolates from Japanese dogs were grouped together as MSP clade II, although they belonged to different Cox1 subclades (either Ib or Ie).

Figure 4
figure 4

Maximum-likelihood tree built for selected Strongyloides isolates using a portion of a nuclear major sperm protein domain-containing protein (MSP) gene. MEGA7 software was used to build the tree using a dataset of MSP gene (551 bp) based on the Tamura-Nei model. Two-letter codes next to the isolate names indicate types of hosts from which those were isolated. Letters inside the brackets indicate the Cox1 clade to which each isolate belonged.

Morphometrics of the S. stercoralisisolates belonging to Cox1 clade II

The phylogenetic analyses using mitochondrial Cox1, nuclear 28S rDNA and MSP gene as markers suggested that S. stercoralis population isolated from dogs in Myanmar are genetically distinct. Because all the S. stercoralis Cox1 sequences deposited to NCBI database before the present study belonged to the Cox1 clade I, these clade II-worms appeared to represent a diverged member of this species that had not been recognized before. In order to know if this group of worms show any noticeable difference to the reported morphologies for this species, we conducted a morphometrics analysis using free-living male and female adult worms (Table 6). The worms were picked from an additional agar culture plate with fecal sample of a Myanmar dog.

Table 6 Morphometric analysis on S. stercoralis isolated from dog feces in Myanmar.

In case of free-living female adults (n = 17), the parameters measured (body length, body width, esophagus length, and mouth-to-vulva length) were almost identical to those reported by Little13. The relative length of esophagus to the total body length was more similar to S. stercoralis than to S. procyonis. As for the free-living male adults (n = 17), they were measured to be larger (9.0% longer and 7.0% wider) than the reported values for S. stercoralis on average. When values for the individual worms were looked at, they were within the ranges of reported values in most cases (15 out of 17 and 16 out of 17 worms for body length and body width measurements, respectively [data not shown]). The body length/width ratio, relative esophagus length, and absolute spicule length were nearly or completely identical to the reported values for S. stercoralis.

Cox1 haplotypes were determined for free-living male and female adults (n = 16 and n = 17, respectively) from the same culture plate. Among them, 24 worms belonged to the already identified clade II-haplotypes (H057, H059, H074, H078, H079, H083, and H091). The remaining 9 worms formed 7 additional haplotypes (H101–H107). A phylogenetic analysis using existing (H001–H100) and the newly-identified (H101–H107) haplotypes resulted in the positioning of H101–H107 to the clade II (data not shown). Hence, it was considered that either all of or predominant majority of the S. stercoralis population on this particular agar culture plate belong to Cox1 clade II, confirming that the morphometics data obtained above represent the morphology of the clade II worms.

Discussion

We examined the phylogenetic relationships among S. stercoralis isolates from several human and dog populations using nuclear and mitochondrial markers. Overall, our analyses indicate two distinct lineages of S. stercoralis. We tentatively refer to them as S. stercoralis type A and type B. Cox1 clade I vs clade II haplotypes define S. stercoralis as type A or type B, respectively. The characteristics of both types are summarized in Table 7. S. stercoralis type A was found more ubiquitously than type B, being isolated from both human and dog hosts in multiple countries. So far, type B has only been isolated from dogs in Myanmar. All S. stercoralis Cox1 sequences recorded in the NCBI nucleotide database before this study belong to Cox1 clade I. Thus, we consider the type B worms to represent a diverged member of S. stercoralis that has not been recognized before.

Table 7 Tentative classification of Strongyloides stercoralis and their characteristics.

The morphological quantitative features of free-living male and female adult worms of Cox1 clade II were overall consistent with those reported for S. stercoralis by Little13 and differed much more from S. procyonis, the closest known Strongyloides species14. Considering that the morphological differences between S. stercoralis and S. procyonis are minimal, distinguishing between type A and type B S. stercoralis by light microscopy alone would be very difficult, although further verification is needed by direct comparison of Type A (Cox1 Clade I) worms using the same methodologies we employed for the morphometric analysis of Type B (Cox1 Clade II) worms.

18S rDNA HVR-I genotypes turned out to be a reasonably good indicator of the host species from which an isolate was derived. A great majority (351 out of 370, 94.5%) of human-derived isolates bore 18S rDNA hyper-variable region I (HVR-I) genotype 5T/5T, while virtually all (100 out of 101, 99.0%,) worms from dogs carried genotype 4T/4T. Based on this result, it appears that although experimental infection of human strains to dogs is reported15, this direction of cross-transmission appears to be quite rare in our study locations.

Some Cox1 clade I-worms isolated from dog had very similar (1–2 nucleotide difference) or identical Cox1 sequences to haplotypes found in human isolates. Nevertheless, these worms possessed a consistent HVR-I (4T/4T) genotype. These results indicate that the use of Cox1 sequences to differentiate human and dog strains belonging to clade I is not reliable. The presence of the 4T/4T HVR-I allele in isolates throughout the clade I (Ia–e) may indicate that the Cox1 diversity currently observed in clade I already existed before the divergence into human- and dog-adapted strains of S. stercoralis Type A.

HVR-I genotypes differ according to host species, suggesting that the divergence of dog and human strains might predate the dispersal of S. stercoralis to different geographical locations in Asia. On the other hand, the typing data for the 18S rDNA 458 T/A polymorphism show that they are different according to geographical location rather than to the host species. It might be possible that the nucleotide substitution at position 458 might have occurred independently in both dog- and human-infecting strains in Japan, without a true phylogenetic relationship. An alternative and more complex scenario is the double occurrence of divergence into dog and human strains, one in genotype T/T worms of the 458 T/A polymorphism and the other in genotype A/A worms. More typing data using samples from more diverse geographical locations with more genetic markers are required to draw any conclusions.

Eight human samples contained worms with at least one 4T allele (genotypes 4T/4T or 4T/5T). There was no case in which only the 4T/4T genotype was found in human samples (Table 3). These 4T/4T worms were always found together with 4T/5T or 5T/5T worms isolated from the same agar plate, indicating that a heterozygous parasitic female might have been the source of these worms. After sexual reproduction occurred on the agar-plate, these mixed-genotype progeny, including 4T/4T individuals, might have been produced. Regarding the means of reproduction of the free-living adults of Strongyloides, earlier cytological studies (Hammond and Robinson16 for S. stercoralis 16, Nigon and Roman17; Bolla and Robers18 for S. ratti 17, 18; Zaffagnini19; Triantaphyllou and Moncol20 for S. papillosus 19, 20, and Triantaphyllou and Moncol20 for S. suis)20 proposed sperm-dependent parthenogenesis (pseudogamy). This proposal was disproved later for S. ratti 21 and S. pappilosus 22 using molecular genetics approaches. In case of S. stercoralis, a recent report suggests that the sexual reproduction of free-living adults is highly likely to be occurring, on the basis of inbreeding coefficient estimation using genome-wide SNP data obtained from isolates from Myanmar humans23, although the direct demonstration is still awaited. At this point, inference was based solely on the observation that 4T/4T worms were always identified in the presence of 4T/5T and 5T/5T worms.

This study and a previous study in Cambodia11 identified a polymorphism at position 458 (numbering based on AF279916) in 18S rDNA. The majority of human and dog isolates in Myanmar possessed genotype T/T, while the opposite was true in isolates taken in Japan. Importantly, all three people who were infected with the rare A/A genotype in Myanmar were immunocompromised individuals with HIV infection. More study is needed to investigate the relationship between the worm genotypes and their potential as opportunistic pathogens. Alternatively, the apparent increase in this rare genotype among HIV-positive individuals might be the result of particular types of behaviors, such as prostitution for foreigners, that potentially increase the risk of acquiring both HIV infection and S. stercoralis of foreign origin. For the population of HIV-positive individuals enrolled this time, however, no data for their occupational histories are available. Therefore, future studies should carefully investigate both worm-genetic and host-behavioral factors.

Currently in Japan, virtually all strongyloidiasis cases occur in residents or former residents of the Okinawa prefecture or prefectures of the Kyushu island (southern regions of Japan)24. However, a rare strongyloidiasis case was reported in Hokkaido, the northernmost of the four main islands of Japan25. This patient had never lived in Okinawa or Kyushu and had no history of traveling abroad. The Strongyloides worms isolated from this patient were atypical in three ways: (1) These were the only worms in Japan to have Cox1 haplotype belonging to clade Ib (H010, Fig. 2); (2) Of the 521 isolates we analyzed in the present study, only one worm from this Hokkaido patient possessed the heterozygous genotype for 18S rDNA 458T/A polymorphism (Table 2); (3) Of all the Japanese human isolates, one worm from this patient carried the 4T/5T genotype. The source of the Strongyloides infection in this patient is unclear, and we believe that further epidemiological study is needed.

The evolutionary history of S. stercoralis has not been extensively studied. Having S. procyonis (parasites of raccoons) as a closest extant relative to S. stercoralis may indicate that both species share a common ancestor, that was most likely be a parasite of ancestral Caniformia. In this case, it might be assumed that S. stercoralis evolved as a parasite of canids originally, and later spread into humans as a result of domestication of Canis lupus. Our epidemiological data suggest that S. stercoralis type B identified in the present study have not adapted to infect humans, and this might be the ancestral phenotype of this species. This hypothesis is most likely and can be further assessed by analysis of more Strongyloides samples from humans, dogs, and dog-like (Caniformia) animals from diverse geographical locations using genome-wide sequence information26.

Methods

Ethics statement

The procedures used in this study were approved by the ethical committees of the University of Medicine 1, Yangon, Myanmar; the Prince of Songkla University, Thailand; and the University of Ryukyus, Japan. All work was performed in accordance with the relevant guidelines and regulations. Written informed consent was obtained from all volunteers who provided a stool specimen. In some cases, nematodes were isolated during routine fecal examinations at clinical laboratories (indicated as “clinical case” in Table 8). In such cases, no informed consent was sought for the use of parasite material. The volunteers and cases identified to be infected with S. stercoralis were treated with anthelminthic drugs. For collection of dog feces from streets or floors of animal shelters, no ethics committee approval or waiver of ethics approval was sought, in line with local policy.

Table 8 Summary of Strongyloides isolates used in this study.

Study areas

Samples from humans

In Myanmar, human fecal samples were obtained from healthy volunteers at three locations (Fig. 5A): Htantabin (Yangon Division, sample code: HTB), Thabaung (Ayeyawady Division, TBN), and Thanlyin (Yangon division, TLN). Additionally, feces samples were obtained from HIV-positive individuals at Mingaladon Specialist Hospital (MGD), also located in Yangon. In Thailand, human fecal samples were collected at the Prince of Songkla University hospital (PSU) from patients who were admitted owing to various medical conditions. In Japan, human fecal samples were obtained from volunteers in Okinawa prefecture (RYK). Additionally, fecal specimens from three clinically suspected strongyloidiasis cases were used in this study. One sample was from an individual from Yakusima (YKS), one was from a patient in Kagoshima (KGS), and the other was from a patient in Hokkaido (HKD). The sampling locations in Japan are shown in Fig. 5B. In Uganda, we obtained a sample from one clinically suspected strongyloidiasis case at St. Mary’s Hospital Lacor, Gulu.

Figure 5
figure 5

Map of Myanmar and Japan showing the geographical origin of the Strongyloides nematode samples. Maps were created with Adobe Creative Suite 5.5 and Microsoft PowerPoint version 15.22 from templates obtained from d-maps.com. (Myanmar: http://www.d-maps.com/carte.php?num_car=4162&lang=en, Japan: http://www.d-maps.com/carte.php?num_car=74&lang=en). Three-letter codes indicate sampling locations. Further details of each sampling location are summarized in Table 8.

Samples from dogs

We conducted two street surveys and two animal shelter surveys at areas inside or close to Yangon city (Yangon and Bago Divisions, Fig. 5A). Fresh dog feces were collected from the streets or the shelter cage floors. Fecal portions not in contact with the ground were collected in stool containers for transportation. To estimate the host number for dog feces sampling, we assumed that each feces found on street or on floor belonged to different dogs.

Sample processing

Parasitological examination was conducted using the agar plate technique27. Approximately 2 g of feces was placed on the center of 2% agar prepared in 60-mm diameter petri dishes. The plates were incubated for up to four days at room temperature and then examined under a dissection microscope for the presence of nematodes. The worm lysis solution was prepared by mixing 0.5 volumes of proteinase K (>600 mAU/mL solution) (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), 0.5 volumes of 1 M dithiothreitol (DTT), and 10 volumes of DirectPCR Lysis Reagent (Tail) (Viagen Biotech, Inc., Los Angeles, CA)23. Nematodes found on agar plates were individually picked and put in PCR tubes containing 10 µL of the worm lysis solution. For lysis, the tubes were incubated at 60 °C for 20 minutes. They were then incubated at 95 °C for 20 minutes to inactivate proteinase K. The tubes containing worm lysate were stored at −30 °C until analyzed.

PCR and DNA sequencing

A segment (935 bp) of the 18S rDNA gene corresponding to positions −2 to 933 of reference sequence AF279916 (GenBank) was amplified using primer pairs 988F (5′-ctcaaagattaagccatgc-3′) and 1912R (5′-tttacggtcagaactaggg-3′)28. The identification of the infecting nematode species was based on the nucleotide sequence of the 3′ region of this PCR product. The same primer, 1912R, was used for the sequencing reaction. A 333-bp region, which spans positions 315–683, was selected for species determination. This locus contains two hyper-variable regions, HVR-II (603–608) and HVR-III (631–651)8, which were reported to be useful for species specific identification among different Strongyloides species. If the 333-bp region, which corresponds to nucleotide positions 315–683 of S. stercoralis 18S rDNA reference sequence (AF279916), perfectly matched to the reference or matched with only one base difference at position 458 (known to be polymorphic among S. stercoralis 11), we considered the nematodes tested to be S. stercoralis. The HVR-I 4T/5T genotypes were determined by sequencing the 5′-region of this PCR product with the primer 988F. For samples in which sequencing traces could not be interpreted directly due to the heterozygosity at this locus, InDelligent v.1.229 was used to computationally reconstruct the two allelic sequences.

A segment (1869 bp) of the mitochondrial genome30 (positions 5237–7106 of AJ558163; GenBank) including the entire open reading frame (ORF) of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (Cox1) gene was amplified by PCR using the primer pairs ENM175 (5′-tttctggtgctcttcgactg-3′) and ENM176 (5′-aaaacaacacccataagactacaaaa-3′). The PCR products were purified in the same way as for the 18S rDNA gene. The PCR products were sequenced using ENM175 and ENM178 (5′-tggcttgttttgttgataatgg-3′). After trimming low-quality reads at both ends of the chromatogram, the sequences obtained with ENM175 and ENM178 were assembled into contigs. Erroneous base calls were corrected manually. These contigs were then aligned using ClustalX 2.131. The aligned sequences were further trimmed to have a fixed length of 711 bp, which corresponds to positions 5656–6366 of AJ558163.

The Cox1 sequences that we obtained (521 sequences) and those from a database (50 sequences, NCBI database)10, 32, 33 were combined to form a single dataset.

A gDNA region that includes a portion of 28S rDNA was amplified using primer pairs ENM189 (5′-gtaaacgtaagtcattagcttacattg-3′) and ENM190 (5′-cgcactactatggctataactgc-3′). To sequence this PCR product, ENM190 and ENM270 (5′-ggacgtgaaaccgatacgat-3′) were used as sequencing primers. Erroneous base calls were corrected manually. The sequences obtained with both primers were assembled into contigs. The contigs were then aligned and trimmed so as to be aligned with the reference sequence (positions of 82–815 of U39489.1, GenBanK) The length of such trimmed contigs varied between 733 to 736 bp.

A gDNA region containing a putative MSP gene was amplified using the primer pair ENM246 (5′-caatatgatttagatattgctcaagc-3′) and ENM247 (5′-gtatttttacttacttcacctcc-3′), that were designed based on a reference gene sequence, SSTP_0000122000.1 (WormBase ParaSite; parasite.wormbase.org). The resultant PCR products (801 bp in length) were subjected to sequencing from both directions using the same primers used for the PCR. The sequences obtained with both primers were assembled into contigs. After manual error corrections, the contigs were aligned using ClustalX 2.1. The aligned contigs were trimmed into a fixed length of 551 base pairs that corresponds to positions 1,324,934–1,325,484 on scaffold 0000001 (S. stercoralis genome assembly v2.0.4)26.

In this study, we used the following rule for counting: after analyzing multiple worms isolated from a single host, if only a single genotype/haplotype was identified, the host was counted only once for this particular genotype/haplotype. However, when multiple genotypes/haplotypes were identified, the host was counted once for each genotype/haplotype. We also applied this rule to the haplotype network analysis (below).

Phylogenetic and haplotype network analyses

A total of 571 Cox1 sequences were collapsed into haplotypes using DNACollapser34. The MEGA7 program35 was used to build a maximum-likelihood tree using Cox1 haplotypes obtained above based on the Tamura-Nei model.

In case of the 28S rDNA sequence, we acquired successful sequencing results from 311 out of 521 samples. The contig sequences from these 311 samples were collapsed into haplotypes. Using these haplotypes, a neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree was constructed using the MEGA7 program.

For analysis of the MSP gene, sequences from each individual nematode were used without collapsing into haplotypes sequences to construct a phylogenetic tree.

A median-joining network for Cox1 haplotypes was obtained and visualized using Network 5.0.0.0 and Network Publisher 2.1.1.2 (fluxus-engineering.com).

Morphometrics of the S. stercoralis isolates belonging to Cox1 clade II

For morphometric analysis, an additional worm sampling was conducted. Free-living male and female adult worms were picked from an agar plate bearing a Myanmar dog fecal specimen and then heat-killed (1 minute at 60 °C). A part of the sample was fixed in 10% formalin for morphological analysis and the remainder was preserved in 75% ethanol for DNA sequencing. Images of each formalin-fixed nematode were captured using an Olympus BX51 microscope equipped with a DP71 digital camera. The measurements were carried out using Olympus cellSens imaging software.

Accession codes

Sequencing data obtained in this study were submitted to DDBJ (DNA Data Bank of Japan) under accession numbers: Cox1: LC179022–LC179542, 28S rDNA: LC259531–LC259841, and MSP: LC184615, LC184617, LC184622, LC184624, LC184715, LC184717, LC184729, LC184748, LC184771, LC184777, LC184780, LC184811, LC184820, LC184821, LC184824, LC184829, LC184840, LC184844, LC184895, LC184920, LC184923, LC184924, LC184927, LC184930, LC184932, LC184935, LC184938, LC184940, LC184943, LC184944, LC184946.