Bazsalovicsová Eva, Králová-Hromadová Ivica, Štefka Jan, Minárik Gabriel, Bokorová Silvia, Pybus Margo
Institute of Parasitology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Hlinkova 3, 04001, Košice, Slovakia.
Biology Centre AS CR, Institute of Parasitology and Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, Branišovská 31, 37005, České Budějovice, Czech Republic.
Parasit Vectors. 2015 May 28;8:288. doi: 10.1186/s13071-015-0895-1.
Population structure and genetic interrelationships of giant liver fluke Fascioloides magna from all enzootic North American regions were revealed in close relation with geographical distribution of its obligate definitive cervid hosts for the first time.
Variable fragments of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (cox1; 384 bp) and nicotinamide dehydrogenase subunit I (nad1; 405 bp) were applied as a tool. The concatenated data set of both cox1 and nad1 sequences (789 bp) contained 222 sequences that resulted in 50 haplotypes. Genetic data were analysed using Bayesian Inference (BI), Maximum Likelihood (ML) and Analysis of Molecular Variance (AMOVA).
Phylogenetic analysis revealed two major clades of F. magna, which separated the parasite into western and eastern populations. Western populations included samples from Rocky Mountain trench (Alberta) and northern Pacific coast (British Columbia and Oregon), whereas, the eastern populations were represented by individuals from the Great Lakes region (Minnesota), Gulf coast, lower Mississippi, and southern Atlantic seaboard region (Mississippi, Louisiana, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida) and northern Quebec and Labrador. Haplotype network and results of AMOVA analysis confirmed explicit genetic separation of western and eastern populations of the parasite that suggests long term historical isolation of F. magna populations.
The genetic makeup of the parasite's populations correlates with data on historical distribution of its hosts. Based on the mitochondrial data there are no signs of host specificity of F. magna adults towards any definitive host species; the detected haplotypes of giant liver fluke are shared amongst several host species in adjacent populations.
首次揭示了来自北美所有地方流行区的巨片形吸虫(Fascioloides magna)的种群结构和遗传相互关系,这与它专性终末宿主鹿科动物的地理分布密切相关。
将线粒体细胞色素c氧化酶亚基I(cox1;384bp)和烟酰胺脱氢酶亚基I(nad1;405bp)的可变片段作为工具。cox1和nad1序列的串联数据集(789bp)包含222个序列,产生了50个单倍型。使用贝叶斯推断(BI)、最大似然法(ML)和分子方差分析(AMOVA)对遗传数据进行分析。
系统发育分析揭示了巨片形吸虫的两个主要分支,将该寄生虫分为西部和东部种群。西部种群包括来自落基山河谷(艾伯塔省)和北太平洋海岸(不列颠哥伦比亚省和俄勒冈州)的样本,而东部种群则由来自五大湖地区(明尼苏达州)、墨西哥湾沿岸、密西西比河下游以及南大西洋沿岸地区(密西西比州、路易斯安那州、南卡罗来纳州、佐治亚州、佛罗里达州)以及魁北克省北部和拉布拉多的个体代表。单倍型网络和AMOVA分析结果证实了该寄生虫西部和东部种群之间明显的遗传分离,这表明巨片形吸虫种群长期处于历史隔离状态。
寄生虫种群的遗传构成与其宿主历史分布数据相关。基于线粒体数据,没有迹象表明巨片形吸虫成虫对任何终末宿主物种具有宿主特异性;在相邻种群的几种宿主物种中共享检测到的巨片形吸虫单倍型。