Department of Biological Sciences, Clapp Laboratory, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, MA, USA.
Department of Environmental Sciences - Zoology, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Mol Ecol. 2018 Mar;27(6):1371-1384. doi: 10.1111/mec.14545. Epub 2018 Apr 6.
Knowledge of a species' population genetic structure can provide insight into fundamental ecological and evolutionary processes including gene flow, genetic drift and adaptive evolution. Such inference is of particular importance for parasites, as an understanding of their population structure can illuminate epidemiological and coevolutionary dynamics. Here, we describe the population genetic structure of the bacterium Pasteuria ramosa, a parasite that infects planktonic crustaceans of the genus Daphnia. This system has become a model for investigations of host-parasite interactions and represents an example of coevolution via negative frequency-dependent selection (aka "Red Queen" dynamics). To sample P. ramosa, we experimentally infected a panel of Daphnia hosts with natural spore banks from the sediments of 25 ponds throughout much of the species range in Europe and western Asia. Using 12 polymorphic variable number tandem repeat loci (VNTR loci), we identified substantial genetic diversity, both within and among localities, that was structured geographically among ponds. Genetic diversity was also structured among host genotypes within ponds, although this pattern varied by locality, with P. ramosa at some localities partitioned into distinct host-specific lineages, and other localities where recombination had shuffled genetic variation among different infection phenotypes. Across the sample range, there was a pattern of isolation by distance, and principal components analysis coupled with Procrustes rotation identified congruence between patterns of genetic variation and geography. Our findings support the hypothesis that Pasteuria is an endemic parasite coevolving closely with its host. These results provide important context for previous studies of this model system and inform hypotheses for future research.
物种的种群遗传结构知识可以深入了解包括基因流、遗传漂变和适应性进化在内的基本生态和进化过程。对于寄生虫来说,这种推断尤为重要,因为了解它们的种群结构可以阐明流行病学和协同进化动态。在这里,我们描述了寄生在浮游甲壳动物桡足类属中的细菌帕斯图里亚·罗莫萨的种群遗传结构。该系统已成为宿主-寄生虫相互作用研究的模型,代表了通过负频率依赖性选择(又名“红皇后”动态)进行协同进化的一个例子。为了采样帕斯图里亚·罗莫萨,我们用来自欧洲和西亚 25 个池塘沉积物中的天然孢子库实验感染了一组桡足类宿主。使用 12 个多态性可变数串联重复序列(VNTR 序列),我们发现了大量的遗传多样性,无论是在本地还是在本地之间,这些遗传多样性在池塘之间具有地理结构。宿主基因型之间的遗传多样性也存在结构,但这种模式因地点而异,在一些地点,帕斯图里亚·罗莫萨分为不同的宿主特异性谱系,而在其他地点,重组将不同感染表型之间的遗传变异打乱了。在整个样本范围内,存在着一种隔离距离的模式,主成分分析结合普罗克鲁斯旋转确定了遗传变异模式与地理模式之间的一致性。我们的发现支持了这样一种假设,即帕斯图里亚是一种地方性寄生虫,与宿主密切协同进化。这些结果为该模型系统的先前研究提供了重要背景,并为未来的研究提供了假设。