Kanako YamaneTetsuya YanagidaTiaoying LiXingwang ChenParon DekumyoyJitra WaikagulAgathe NkouawaMinoru NakaoYasuhito SakoAkira ItoHiroshi SatoMunehiro OkamotoYamaguchi UniversityAsahikawa Medical UniversityCenters for Disease Control and PreventionMahidol UniversityKyoto University2018-10-192018-10-192013-11-01Parasitology. Vol.140, No.13 (2013), 1595-160114698161003118202-s2.0-84886915751https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/30963SUMMARY Partial sequences of the DNA polymerase delta (pold) gene from Taenia saginata-like adult worms were sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that pold gene sequences were clearly divided into two clades, differing from each other in five to seven nucleotides. There is little doubt that T. saginata and Taenia asiatica were once separated into two distinct taxa as has been concluded in previous studies. On the other hand, most of the adult worms, which were identified as T. asiatica using mitochondrial DNA, were homozygous for an allele that originated from the allele of T. saginata via single nucleotide substitution. These results indicate that most of the adult worms, which had been called T. asiatica, are not actually 'pure T. asiatica' but instead originated from the hybridization of 'pure T. saginata' and 'pure T. asiatica'. © 2013 Cambridge University Press.Mahidol UniversityAgricultural and Biological SciencesImmunology and MicrobiologyMedicineGenotypic relationships between taenia saginata, taenia asiatica and their hybridsConference PaperSCOPUS10.1017/S0031182013001273