Cornejo Omar E, Escalante Ananias A
Emory University, Program in Population Biology, Ecology and Evolution, Atlanta, GA 20322, USA.
Trends Parasitol. 2006 Dec;22(12):558-63. doi: 10.1016/j.pt.2006.09.007. Epub 2006 Oct 10.
The evolutionary history of Plasmodium vivax has recently been addressed in terms of its origin as a parasite of humans and the age of extant populations. The consensus is that P. vivax originated as a result of a host switch from a non-human primate to hominids and that the extant populations did not originate as recently as previously proposed. Here, we show that, in a comparison of parasite isolates from across the world, Asian populations of P. vivax are the oldest. We discuss how this result, together with the phylogenetic evidence that P. vivax derived from Plasmodium found in Southeast Asian macaques, is most simply explained by assuming an Asian origin of this parasite. Nevertheless, the available data show only the tip of the iceberg. We discuss how sampling might affect time estimates to the most recent common ancestor for P. vivax populations and suggest that spatially explicit estimates are needed to understand the demographic history of this parasite better.
间日疟原虫的进化史最近已从其作为人类寄生虫的起源以及现存种群的年代方面进行了探讨。目前的共识是,间日疟原虫起源于从非人类灵长类动物到原始人类的宿主转换,而且现存种群并非如之前所认为的那样起源于近期。在此,我们表明,在对来自世界各地的寄生虫分离株进行比较时,间日疟原虫的亚洲种群是最古老的。我们讨论了这一结果,连同间日疟原虫源自东南亚猕猴体内疟原虫的系统发育证据,如何通过假设该寄生虫起源于亚洲而得到最简单的解释。然而,现有数据只是冰山一角。我们讨论了采样如何可能影响对间日疟原虫种群最近共同祖先的时间估计,并提出需要进行空间明确的估计,以便更好地理解这种寄生虫的种群历史。