Logo image
Molecular analysis of Cryptosporidium species in Western Australian human populations (2023–2025), and the emergence of rare C. hominis IeA11G3T3 subtype
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Molecular analysis of Cryptosporidium species in Western Australian human populations (2023–2025), and the emergence of rare C. hominis IeA11G3T3 subtype

Sugandika Bulumulla, Amanda Ash, Una Ryan, Barry Combs, Andrew Larkins, Nevada Pingault, Damien Bradford and Amanda D. Barbosa
Parasitology International, Vol.111, 103188
2025
pdf
Published1.75 MBDownloadView
CC BY V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

Cryptosporidium species are an important cause of diarrhoeal disease worldwide. Many countries reported declines in cryptosporidiosis incidence during COVID-19 restrictions, followed by marked increases post-COVID. A similar pattern has been observed in Australia, with record-high case numbers reported across multiple states in 2024–2025, including Western Australia (WA), where an outbreak occurred in 2025. Between 1st January – 30th June 2025, WA reported a statewide total of 1110 human cryptosporidiosis cases, which is substantially higher than the previous years. In the present study, a subset of WA cases from 2025 was investigated using contact tracing and molecular typing and compared with subtypes circulating in 2023 and 2024. Sequence analysis of the 18S rRNA and gp60 loci identified three Cryptosporidium species: C. hominis (91.5 %, 108/118), C. parvum (6.8 %, 8/118), and C. meleagridis (1.7 %, 2/118), comprising 13 distinct subtypes, over the three years. Notably, a previously rare C. hominis subtype, IeA11G3T3, emerged in 2023 and by 2025 had become the dominant subtype (92.1 %, 70/76) of samples typed. Multi-locus sequence typing (MLST) of a representative subset of IeA11G3T3 isolates (n = 13) showed that all sequences were identical, except for one isolate from 2024, which contained three insertions: an 18-bp repeat in the cp-47 gene and both a 12-bp and a 6-bp repeat in the dz-hrgp gene. The C. hominis IeA11G3T3 subtype has also recently emerged as a dominant subtype in several other countries, although the factors driving its emergence remain unclear.

Details

Metrics

10 Record Views
Logo image