Gagneux P, Gonder M K, Goldberg T L, Morin P A
University of California San Diego, Glycobiology Research and Training Center, Cellular and Molecular Medicine-East, Room 1087, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0687, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2001 Jun 29;356(1410):889-97. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2001.0865.
The isolation of phylogenetically distinct primate immunodeficiency viruses from at least seven wild-born, captive chimpanzees indicates that viruses closely related to HIV-1 may be endemic in some wild chimpanzee populations. The search for the chimpanzee population or populations harbouring these viruses is therefore on. This paper attempts to answer the question of whether or not such populations of chimpanzees are likely to exist at all, and, if so, where they are likely to be found. We summarize what is known about gene flow in wild populations of chimpanzees, both between major phylogeographical subdivisions of the species, and within these subdivisions. Our analysis indicates that hitherto undocumented reproductively isolated chimpanzee populations may in fact exist. This conclusion is based on the observation that, despite limited geographical sampling and limited numbers of genetic loci, conventional notions of the nature and extent of chimpanzee gene flow have recently been substantially revised. Molecular genetic studies using mitochondrial DNA sequences and hypervariable nuclear microsatellite markers have indicated the existence of heretofore undocumented barriers to chimpanzee gene flow. These studies have identified at least one population of chimpanzees genetically distinct enough to be classified into a new subspecies (Pan troglodytes vellerosus). At the same time, they have called into question the long-accepted genetic distinction between eastern chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) and western equatorial chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes troglodytes). The same studies have further indicated that gene flow between local populations is more extensive than was previously thought, and follows patterns sometimes inconsistent with those documented through direct behavioural observation. Given the apparently incomplete nature of the current understanding of chimpanzee gene flow in equatorial Africa, it seems reasonable to speculate that a chimpanzee population or populations may exist which both harbour the putative HIV-1 ancestor, and which have remained reproductively isolated from other chimpanzee populations over the time-scale relevant to the evolution of the SIVcpz-HIV-1 complex of viruses. Continued extensive sampling of wild chimpanzee populations, both for their genes and their viruses, should be performed quickly considering the high probability of extinction that many wild chimpanzee populations face today. The history of human-chimpanzee contacts is discussed.
从至少七只野生出生、圈养的黑猩猩中分离出系统发育上不同的灵长类免疫缺陷病毒,这表明与HIV-1密切相关的病毒可能在一些野生黑猩猩种群中流行。因此,寻找携带这些病毒的黑猩猩种群的工作正在进行。本文试图回答这样的黑猩猩种群是否可能存在,如果存在,可能在哪里被发现的问题。我们总结了关于黑猩猩野生种群中基因流动的已知情况,包括该物种主要系统地理分区之间以及这些分区内部的基因流动情况。我们的分析表明,实际上可能存在迄今未被记录的生殖隔离的黑猩猩种群。这一结论基于以下观察结果:尽管地理采样有限且遗传位点数量有限,但最近黑猩猩基因流动的性质和范围的传统观念已被大幅修正。使用线粒体DNA序列和高变核微卫星标记的分子遗传学研究表明,存在迄今未被记录的黑猩猩基因流动障碍。这些研究已经确定了至少一个基因上足够独特的黑猩猩种群,可以被归类为一个新的亚种(倭黑猩猩)。同时,它们也对长期以来被接受的东部黑猩猩和西部赤道黑猩猩之间的遗传差异提出了质疑。同样的研究进一步表明,当地种群之间的基因流动比以前认为的更为广泛,并且遵循的模式有时与通过直接行为观察记录的模式不一致。鉴于目前对赤道非洲黑猩猩基因流动的理解显然不完整,推测可能存在一个或多个黑猩猩种群,它们既携带假定的HIV-1祖先,又在与SIVcpz-HIV-1病毒复合体进化相关的时间尺度上与其他黑猩猩种群保持生殖隔离,这似乎是合理的。考虑到许多野生黑猩猩种群如今面临的高灭绝概率,应尽快对野生黑猩猩种群进行持续广泛的基因和病毒采样。本文还讨论了人类与黑猩猩接触的历史。