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Sarcocystis calchasi is a novel intracellular protozoan parasite belonging to the phy-lum Apicomplexa with an obligatory two-host, predator-prey life cycle. The northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis) is its definitive host and the domestic pigeon (Columba livia f. domestica) its intermediate host. It has been identified as the causative agent of Pigeon Protozoal En-cephalitis (PPE) during an outbreak in Berlin in the period between 2006 and 2008. PPE is an ongoing threat as new cases are continuously diagnosed in pigeons in the Berlin area.
Since many Sarcocystis spp. are polyxenous, being capable of infecting more than one species, and birds as well as mammals may usually serve as their intermediate hosts, a retrospective study was conducted to determine whether Sarcocystis calchasi may be in-volved in cases of meningoencephalitis of unknown origin (MUO) in mammals.
Formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) samples of 143 brains with MUO of different mammalian species (dog, cat, pig, cattle, sheep, guinea pig, horse, goat, mouse, raccoon, ferret, hamster, mink, mane wolf) from the time period between 1989 and 2012 were reex-amined histologically using H&E stain. DNA was isolated from FFPE material and screened by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with primers specific for the 18S rRNA and the Internal Transcribed Spacer region 1 (ITS1) to detect Sarcocystis calchasi or other apicomplexan parasites, respectively.
In all samples the diagnosis of non-suppurative (lymphoplasmacytic and / or granu-lomatous) meningoencephalitis was histologically confirmed but no parasitic structures were found in the histopathological investigation. DNA of Sarcocystis calchasi or other apicom-plexan parasites could not be detected in any of the samples. However due to formalin fixa-tion the DNA quality of the samples might not have been optimal in all cases, which is why the results should be interpreted carefully.
Even though the prevalence of PPE in pigeons remains constant and Sarcocystis cal-chasi constitutes a persistent threat to pigeons in the Berlin area, no evidence was found here for a role of this parasite in MUO in mammalian species. Nevertheless, taking into con-sideration the methodical drawbacks of analyzing FFPE retrospective cases, a prospective study using new emerging cases with optimal DNA quality and / or immunohistochemical studies with specific antibodies would be advisable.