Small Scott T, Reimer Lisa J, Tisch Daniel J, King Christopher L, Christensen Bruce M, Siba Peter M, Kazura James W, Serre David, Zimmerman Peter A
The Center for Global Health and Diseases, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH, 44106, USA.
Department of Vector Biology, Liverpool School and Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, L3 5QA, UK.
Mol Ecol. 2016 Apr;25(7):1465-77. doi: 10.1111/mec.13574. Epub 2016 Mar 15.
Wuchereria bancrofti is a parasitic nematode and the primary cause of lymphatic filariasis--a disease specific to humans. W. bancrofti currently infects over 90 million people throughout the tropics and has been acknowledged by the world health organization as a vulnerable parasite. Current research has focused primarily on the clinical manifestations of disease and little is known about the evolutionary history of W. bancrofti. To improve upon knowledge of the evolutionary history of W. bancrofti, we whole genome sequenced 13 W. bancrofti larvae. We circumvent many of the difficulties of multiple infections by sampling larvae directly from mosquitoes that were experimentally inoculated with infected blood. To begin, we used whole genome data to reconstruct the historical population size. Our results support a history of fluctuating population sizes that can be correlated with human migration and fluctuating mosquito abundances. Next, we reconstructed the putative pedigree of W. bancrofti worms within an infection using the kinship coefficient. We deduced that there are full-sib and half-sib relationships residing within the same larval cohort. Through combined analysis of the mitochondrial and nuclear genomes we concluded that this is likely a results of polyandrous mating, the first time reported for W. bancrofti. Lastly, we scanned the genomes for signatures of natural selection. Annotation of putative selected regions identified proteins that may have aided in a parasitic life style or may have evolved to protect against current drug treatments. We discuss our results in the greater context of understanding the biology of an animal with a unique life history and ecology.
班氏吴策线虫是一种寄生线虫,是淋巴丝虫病的主要病因,而淋巴丝虫病是一种人类特有的疾病。目前,班氏吴策线虫在整个热带地区感染了超过9000万人,世界卫生组织已将其认定为易危寄生虫。目前的研究主要集中在该疾病的临床表现上,而对于班氏吴策线虫的进化史却知之甚少。为了增进对班氏吴策线虫进化史的了解,我们对13条班氏吴策线虫幼虫进行了全基因组测序。我们通过直接从经实验接种感染血液的蚊子中采集幼虫样本,规避了多重感染带来的许多困难。首先,我们利用全基因组数据重建了历史种群规模。我们的结果支持种群规模波动的历史,这种波动与人类迁徙和蚊子数量的波动相关。接下来,我们利用亲缘系数重建了感染中班氏吴策线虫的假定谱系。我们推断在同一幼虫群体中存在全同胞和半同胞关系。通过对线粒体和核基因组的联合分析,我们得出这可能是多雄交配的结果,这是首次报道班氏吴策线虫存在这种情况。最后,我们扫描基因组寻找自然选择的信号。对假定选择区域的注释鉴定出了可能有助于寄生生活方式或可能已经进化以抵御当前药物治疗的蛋白质。我们在更广泛的背景下讨论我们的结果,以理解具有独特生活史和生态学的动物的生物学特性。