Teixeira Marcus de M, Patané José S L, Taylor Maria L, Gómez Beatriz L, Theodoro Raquel C, de Hoog Sybren, Engelthaler David M, Zancopé-Oliveira Rosely M, Felipe Maria S S, Barker Bridget M
Division of Pathogen Genomics, Translational Genomics Research Institute-North, Flagstaff, Arizona, United States of America.
Department of Cell Biology, University of Brasília, Brasilia, Brazil.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2016 Jun 1;10(6):e0004732. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004732. eCollection 2016 Jun.
Histoplasma capsulatum comprises a worldwide complex of saprobiotic fungi mainly found in nitrogen/phosphate (often bird guano) enriched soils. The microconidia of Histoplasma species may be inhaled by mammalian hosts, and is followed by a rapid conversion to yeast that can persist in host tissues causing histoplasmosis, a deep pulmonary/systemic mycosis. Histoplasma capsulatum sensu lato is a complex of at least eight clades geographically distributed as follows: Australia, Netherlands, Eurasia, North American classes 1 and 2 (NAm 1 and NAm 2), Latin American groups A and B (LAm A and LAm B) and Africa. With the exception of the Eurasian cluster, those clades are considered phylogenetic species.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Increased Histoplasma sampling (n = 234) resulted in the revision of the phylogenetic distribution and population structure using 1,563 aligned nucleotides from four protein-coding regions. The LAm B clade appears to be divided into at least two highly supported clades, which are geographically restricted to either Colombia/Argentina or Brazil respectively. Moreover, a complex population genetic structure was identified within LAm A clade supporting multiple monophylogenetic species, which could be driven by rapid host or environmental adaptation (~0.5 MYA). We found two divergent clades, which include Latin American isolates (newly named as LAm A1 and LAm A2), harboring a cryptic cluster in association with bats.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: At least six new phylogenetic species are proposed in the Histoplasma species complex supported by different phylogenetic and population genetics methods, comprising LAm A1, LAm A2, LAm B1, LAm B2, RJ and BAC-1 phylogenetic species. The genetic isolation of Histoplasma could be a result of differential dispersion potential of naturally infected bats and other mammals. In addition, the present study guides isolate selection for future population genomics and genome wide association studies in this important pathogen complex.
荚膜组织胞浆菌是一种全球分布的腐生真菌复合体,主要存在于富含氮/磷(通常是鸟粪)的土壤中。组织胞浆菌属的微分生孢子可能被哺乳动物宿主吸入,随后迅速转变为酵母形式,可在宿主组织中持续存在,引发组织胞浆菌病,这是一种深部肺部/全身性真菌病。荚膜组织胞浆菌复合群至少由八个分支组成,其地理分布如下:澳大利亚、荷兰、欧亚大陆、北美1类和2类(NAm 1和NAm 2)、拉丁美洲A组和B组(LAm A和LAm B)以及非洲。除欧亚分支外,这些分支被视为系统发育种。
方法/主要发现:增加组织胞浆菌样本量(n = 234)后,利用来自四个蛋白质编码区域的1563个比对核苷酸,对系统发育分布和种群结构进行了修订。LAm B分支似乎至少分为两个得到高度支持的分支,在地理上分别局限于哥伦比亚/阿根廷或巴西。此外,在LAm A分支内鉴定出复杂的种群遗传结构,支持多个单系物种,这可能是由快速的宿主或环境适应(约0.5百万年前)驱动的。我们发现了两个不同的分支,其中包括拉丁美洲分离株(新命名为LAm A1和LAm A2),它们与蝙蝠相关存在一个隐秘类群。
结论/意义:通过不同的系统发育和种群遗传学方法,在组织胞浆菌复合群中至少提出了六个新的系统发育种,包括LAm A1、LAm A2、LAm B1、LAm B2、RJ和BAC - 1系统发育种。组织胞浆菌的遗传隔离可能是自然感染蝙蝠和其他哺乳动物不同扩散潜力的结果。此外,本研究为该重要病原体复合群未来的种群基因组学和全基因组关联研究提供了分离株选择指导。