. . . . "Modr\u00FD, D." . "Hasegawa, H." . "Humans and great apes cohabiting the forest ecosystem in Central African Republic harbour the same hookworms"@en . . "Necator spp.; mountain gorillas; infection; chimpanzees; Dzanga-Sangha Protected Areas, Central African Republic"@en . "1"^^ . "PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases" . "RIV/68081766:_____/14:00427111" . . "I, P(ED1.1.00/02.0068), P(GA206/09/0927)" . "Kalousov\u00E1, B." . "Petr\u017Eelkov\u00E1, Kl\u00E1ra Judita" . "Shutt, K. A." . "Kitagawa, M." . . "We conducted analyses of DNA sequences obtained from the infective larvae of Necator spp. from humans and great apes inhabiting Dzanga-Sangha Protected Areas, Central African Republic. Three sequence types (I\u2013III) were recognized in the in the ITS region, and 34 cox1 haplotypes represented three phylogenetic groups (A\u2013C). I-A, II-B, II-C, III-B, III-C combinations were determined. Combination I-A, corresponding to Necator americanus, was demonstrated in humans and western lowland gorillas; II-B and II-C were observed in humans (local inhabitants and researchers), western lowland gorillas and chimpanzees; III-B and III-C were found only in humans. Pairwise nucleotide difference in the cox1 haplotypes between the groups was more than 8%, while the difference within each group was less than 2.1%, suggesting that each type represents a distinct species. This is the first molecular evidence that Necator species found in great apes can infect humans and vice versa."@en . "8"^^ . "1935-2735" . "Profousov\u00E1, I." . "US - Spojen\u00E9 st\u00E1ty americk\u00E9" . "10"^^ . "[0696BCD205E1]" . "000337348800007" . "Humans and great apes cohabiting the forest ecosystem in Central African Republic harbour the same hookworms" . . "3" . "10.1371/journal.pntd.0002715" . . "RIV/68081766:_____/14:00427111!RIV15-GA0-68081766" . . . . . . . . "Humans and great apes cohabiting the forest ecosystem in Central African Republic harbour the same hookworms"@en . "We conducted analyses of DNA sequences obtained from the infective larvae of Necator spp. from humans and great apes inhabiting Dzanga-Sangha Protected Areas, Central African Republic. Three sequence types (I\u2013III) were recognized in the in the ITS region, and 34 cox1 haplotypes represented three phylogenetic groups (A\u2013C). I-A, II-B, II-C, III-B, III-C combinations were determined. Combination I-A, corresponding to Necator americanus, was demonstrated in humans and western lowland gorillas; II-B and II-C were observed in humans (local inhabitants and researchers), western lowland gorillas and chimpanzees; III-B and III-C were found only in humans. Pairwise nucleotide difference in the cox1 haplotypes between the groups was more than 8%, while the difference within each group was less than 2.1%, suggesting that each type represents a distinct species. This is the first molecular evidence that Necator species found in great apes can infect humans and vice versa." . . . . . "Todd, A." . "8" . "Humans and great apes cohabiting the forest ecosystem in Central African Republic harbour the same hookworms" . "19997" .