Laboratorio de Eco-Epidemiología, Departamento de Ecología, Genética y Evolución, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Infect Genet Evol. 2011 Jul;11(5):895-903. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2011.02.013. Epub 2011 Feb 23.
The recent discovery of sylvatic populations of Triatoma infestans outside the Andean Valleys of Bolivia prompted an evolutionary question about the putative ancestral area of origin and dispersal of the species, and an epidemiological question regarding the possible role of these sylvatic populations in the recolonization process of insecticide-treated houses. The finding of a population of sylvatic melanic T. infestans (dark morphs) in the Argentinean dry Chaco at 7 km from a peridomestic bug population of typical coloration gave us the opportunity to test both questions simultaneously by employing phylogenetic and population genetic approaches. For this purpose we analyzed sylvatic and peridomestic bugs using sequence-based mitochondrial and nuclear markers (mtCOI and ITS-1) and microsatellites. Sylvatic bugs were confirmed to be T. infestans and not hybrids, and showed high levels of genetic variability and departures from neutral expectations for mtCOI variation. New ITS-1 and mtCOI haplotypes were recorded, as well as haplotypes shared with peridomestic and/or domestic bugs from previous records. The peridomestic population was invariant for ITS-1 and mtCOI, but showed variability for microsatellites and signatures of a population bottleneck, probably due to a limited number of founders. Phylogenetic analyses were consistent with the presence of ancestral haplotypes in sylvatic bugs. According to F-statistics and assignment methods there was a significant differentiation between sylvatic and peridomestic bugs and gene flow was low and asymmetric, with more bugs moving from the peridomicile to the sylvatic environment. These results support the hypothesis of the Chaco region as the area of origin of T. infestans, and a limited role of sylvatic melanic T. infestans in peridomestic infestation in the Argentinean Chaco.
最近在玻利维亚安第斯山谷以外的地区发现了野外栖息的 Triatoma infestans 种群,这引发了一个关于该物种假定的起源和扩散的进化问题,以及一个关于这些野外栖息种群在经过杀虫剂处理的房屋重新殖民化过程中可能发挥的作用的流行病学问题。在距离一个典型颜色的家庭周围昆虫种群 7 公里的阿根廷干燥查科地区发现了一个野外黑型(深色形态)的 T. infestans 种群,这使我们有机会通过运用系统发育和种群遗传学方法同时检验这两个问题。为此,我们使用基于序列的线粒体和核标记(mtCOI 和 ITS-1)和微卫星分析了野外和家庭周围的昆虫。野外昆虫被确认为 T. infestans,而不是杂种,并且显示出高水平的遗传变异性和对 mtCOI 变异的中性预期的偏离。记录了新的 ITS-1 和 mtCOI 单倍型,以及与之前记录的家庭周围和/或家庭昆虫共享的单倍型。家庭周围的昆虫在 ITS-1 和 mtCOI 方面是不变的,但在微卫星方面表现出变异性,并且存在种群瓶颈的特征,这可能是由于奠基者数量有限。系统发育分析与野外昆虫中存在祖先单倍型一致。根据 F-统计量和分配方法,野外和家庭周围的昆虫存在显著分化,基因流低且不对称,更多的昆虫从家庭周围环境向野外环境移动。这些结果支持了查科地区是 T. infestans 起源地的假说,并且野外黑型 T. infestans 在阿根廷查科家庭周围的侵染中作用有限。