Chambouvet Aurélie, Gower David J, Jirků Miloslav, Yabsley Michael J, Davis Andrew K, Leonard Guy, Maguire Finlay, Doherty-Bone Thomas M, Bittencourt-Silva Gabriela Bueno, Wilkinson Mark, Richards Thomas A
Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QD, United Kingdom; Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, United Kingdom;
Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, United Kingdom;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Aug 25;112(34):E4743-51. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1500163112. Epub 2015 Aug 10.
The decline of amphibian populations, particularly frogs, is often cited as an example in support of the claim that Earth is undergoing its sixth mass extinction event. Amphibians seem to be particularly sensitive to emerging diseases (e.g., fungal and viral pathogens), yet the diversity and geographic distribution of infectious agents are only starting to be investigated. Recent work has linked a previously undescribed protist with mass-mortality events in the United States, in which infected frog tadpoles have an abnormally enlarged yellowish liver filled with protist cells of a presumed parasite. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that this infectious agent was affiliated with the Perkinsea: a parasitic group within the alveolates exemplified by Perkinsus sp., a "marine" protist responsible for mass-mortality events in commercial shellfish populations. Using small subunit (SSU) ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequencing, we developed a targeted PCR protocol for preferentially sampling a clade of the Perkinsea. We tested this protocol on freshwater environmental DNA, revealing a wide diversity of Perkinsea lineages in these environments. Then, we used the same protocol to test for Perkinsea-like lineages in livers of 182 tadpoles from multiple families of frogs. We identified a distinct Perkinsea clade, encompassing a low level of SSU rDNA variation different from the lineage previously associated with tadpole mass-mortality events. Members of this clade were present in 38 tadpoles sampled from 14 distinct genera/phylogroups, from five countries across three continents. These data provide, to our knowledge, the first evidence that Perkinsea-like protists infect tadpoles across a wide taxonomic range of frogs in tropical and temperate environments, including oceanic islands.
两栖动物数量的减少,尤其是青蛙数量的减少,常被引为例证来支持地球正在经历第六次大灭绝事件这一说法。两栖动物似乎对新出现的疾病(如真菌和病毒病原体)特别敏感,然而,感染因子的多样性和地理分布才刚刚开始被研究。最近的研究将一种此前未被描述的原生生物与美国的大规模死亡事件联系起来,在这些事件中,受感染的青蛙蝌蚪肝脏异常肿大且发黄,里面充满了一种疑似寄生虫的原生生物细胞。系统发育分析表明,这种感染因子属于Perkinsea:它是肺泡虫中的一个寄生群体,以Perkinsus sp.为代表,Perkinsus sp.是一种“海洋”原生生物,会导致商业贝类种群出现大规模死亡事件。通过使用小亚基(SSU)核糖体DNA(rDNA)测序,我们开发了一种靶向PCR方案,用于优先对Perkinsea的一个进化枝进行采样。我们在淡水环境DNA上测试了该方案,发现这些环境中存在多种Perkinsea谱系。然后,我们使用相同的方案对来自多个蛙科的182只蝌蚪的肝脏进行检测,以寻找类似Perkinsea的谱系。我们鉴定出一个独特的Perkinsea进化枝,其包含的SSU rDNA变异水平较低,与之前与蝌蚪大规模死亡事件相关的谱系不同。这个进化枝的成员存在于从三大洲五个国家的14个不同属/系统发育组中采集的38只蝌蚪体内。据我们所知,这些数据首次证明了类似Perkinsea的原生生物会感染热带和温带环境(包括海洋岛屿)中广泛分类的青蛙蝌蚪。