Department of Environmental Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, California, United States of America.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2019 Sep 18;13(9):e0007552. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0007552. eCollection 2019 Sep.
In the Americas, as in much of the rest of the world, the dengue virus vector Aedes aegypti is found in close association with human habitations, often leading to high population densities of mosquitoes in urban settings. In the Peruvian Amazon, this vector has been expanding to rural communities over the last 10-15 years, but to date, the population genetic structure of Ae. aegypti in this region has not been characterized. To investigate the relationship between Ae. aegypti gene flow and human transportation networks, we characterized mosquito population structure using a panel of 8 microsatellite markers and linked results to various potential mechanisms for long-distance dispersal. Adult and immature Ae. aegypti (>20 individuals per site) were collected from Iquitos city and from six neighboring riverine communities, i.e., Nauta, Indiana, Mazan, Barrio Florida, Tamshiaco, and Aucayo. FST statistics indicate significant, but low to moderate differentiation for the majority of study site pairs. Population structure of Ae. aegypti is not correlated with the geographic distance between towns, suggesting that human transportation networks provide a reasonable explanation for the high levels of population mixing. Our results indicate that Ae. aegypti gene flow among sub-populations is greatest between locations with heavy boat traffic, such as Iquitos-Tamshiaco and Iquitos-Indiana-Mazan, and lowest between locations with little or no boat/road traffic between them such as Barrio Florida-Iquitos. Bayesian clustering analysis showed ancestral admixture among three genetic clusters; no single cluster was exclusive to any site. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that human transportation networks, particularly riverways, are responsible for the geographic spread of Ae. aegypti in the Peruvian Amazon. Our findings are applicable to other regions of the world characterized by networks of urban islands connected by fluvial transport routes.
在美洲,与世界其他大部分地区一样,登革热病毒载体埃及伊蚊与人类栖息地密切相关,这往往导致城市地区蚊子的种群密度很高。在秘鲁亚马逊地区,这种媒介在过去 10-15 年中已经扩展到农村社区,但迄今为止,该地区埃及伊蚊的种群遗传结构尚未得到描述。为了研究埃及伊蚊基因流动与人类交通网络之间的关系,我们使用 8 个微卫星标记面板来描述蚊子种群结构,并将结果与各种长距离扩散的潜在机制联系起来。从伊基托斯市和六个邻近的河流社区,即 Nauta、Indiana、Mazan、Barrio Florida、Tamshiaco 和 Aucayo 收集了成年和未成熟的埃及伊蚊(每个地点>20 只)。FST 统计数据表明,大多数研究地点对的分化程度显著,但程度较低。埃及伊蚊种群结构与城镇之间的地理距离无关,这表明人类交通网络为人口混合提供了合理的解释。我们的结果表明,在伊基托斯-塔什亚科和伊基托斯-印第安纳-马赞等船只交通繁忙的地点,埃及伊蚊亚种群之间的基因流动最大,而在船只/道路交通很少或没有的地点,如巴里奥佛罗里达-伊基托斯,其基因流动最小。贝叶斯聚类分析显示,在三个遗传聚类中有祖先混合;没有一个聚类是任何一个地点独有的。我们的结果与假设一致,即人类交通网络,特别是河流,是导致埃及伊蚊在秘鲁亚马逊地区地理传播的原因。我们的发现适用于其他以城市岛屿网络通过河流运输路线连接为特征的世界区域。