Pathogen and Microbiome Institute, Northern Arizona University, PO Box 4073, Flagstaff, AZ, 86011, USA.
USDA, ARS, Animal Disease Research Unit, 3003 ADBF, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, 99164, USA.
Parasit Vectors. 2018 May 18;11(1):306. doi: 10.1186/s13071-018-2886-5.
The American dog tick, Dermacentor variabilis, is an important vector of pathogens to humans, wildlife and domestic animals in North America. Although this tick species is widely distributed in the USA and Canada, knowledge of its range-wide phylogeographic patterns remains incomplete.
We carried out a phylogenetic analysis of D. variabilis using samples collected from 26 USA states and five Canadian provinces. Tick samples (n = 1053 in total) originated from two main sources: existing archives (2000-2011), and new collections made from 2012 to 2013. We sequenced a 691 bp fragment of the cox1 gene from a subset (n = 332) of geographically diverse D. variabilis. DNA extracted from individual ticks (n = 1053) was also screened for a Francisella-like endosymbiont, using a targeted 16S rRNA sequencing approach, and important pathogens (Rickettsia spp. and Coxiella burnetii), using species-specific quantitative PCR assays.
Maximum parsimony analysis of cox1 sequences revealed two major groups within D. variabilis with distinct geographical distributions: one from the eastern USA/Canada (Group 1) and one from the west coast states of the USA (California and Washington; Group 2). However, genetic subdivisions within both of these two major groups were weak to moderate and not tightly correlated with geography. We found molecular signatures consistent with Francisella-like endosymbionts in 257 of the DNA extracts from the 1053 individual ticks, as well as Rickettsia spp. and Coxiella burnetii in a small number of ticks (n = 29 and 2, respectively). Phylogenetic patterns for Francisella-like endosymbionts, constructed using sequence data from the bacterial 16S rRNA locus, were similar to those for D. variabilis, with two major groups that had a nearly perfect one-to-one correlation with the two major groups within D. variabilis.
Our findings reveal a distinct phylogenetic split between the two major D. variabilis populations. However, high levels of genetic mixture among widely separated geographical localities occur within each of these two major groups. Furthermore, our phylogenetic analyses provide evidence of long-term tick-symbiont co-evolution. This work has implications for understanding the dispersal and evolutionary ecology of D. variabilis and associated vector-borne diseases.
美洲犬蜱(Dermacentor variabilis)是北美的一种重要病原体媒介,会传播给人类、野生动物和家畜。尽管这种蜱类在 美国和加拿大广泛分布,但对其全范围系统地理学格局的认识仍不完整。
我们对来自美国 26 个州和加拿大 5 个省的蜱样本进行了 D. variabilis 的系统发育分析。蜱样本(共 1053 个)有两个主要来源:现有档案(2000-2011 年)和 2012-2013 年新采集的样本。我们对来自不同地理区域的 D. variabilis 亚群(n = 332)的 cox1 基因的 691 bp 片段进行了测序。从 1053 个个体蜱中提取的 DNA 还使用靶向 16S rRNA 测序方法筛查了弗朗西斯菌样内共生体,使用物种特异性定量 PCR 检测了重要病原体(立克次氏体和柯克斯氏体)。
cox1 序列最大简约分析显示,D. variabilis 内存在两个具有不同地理分布的主要群体:一个来自美国东部/加拿大(第 1 组),另一个来自美国西海岸的加利福尼亚州和华盛顿州(第 2 组)。然而,这两个主要群体中的遗传分支较弱到中等,与地理分布并不完全相关。我们在 1053 个个体蜱的 257 个 DNA 提取物中发现了与弗朗西斯菌样内共生体一致的分子特征,在少数蜱中还发现了立克次氏体和柯克斯氏体(分别为 29 个和 2 个)。使用细菌 16S rRNA 基因座的序列数据构建的弗朗西斯菌样内共生体的系统发育模式与 D. variabilis 的系统发育模式相似,存在两个主要群体,它们与 D. variabilis 内的两个主要群体几乎完全一一对应。
我们的研究结果揭示了 D. variabilis 两个主要种群之间的明显系统发育分裂。然而,在这两个主要群体中的每个群体中,广泛分离的地理区域之间存在高水平的遗传混合。此外,我们的系统发育分析为长期的蜱-共生体协同进化提供了证据。这项工作对理解 D. variabilis 及其相关媒介传播疾病的传播和进化生态学具有重要意义。