Department of Ornithology, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, United States of America.
Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Oct 8;15(10):e0240062. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240062. eCollection 2020.
The eukaryotic blood parasite genus Trypanosoma includes several important pathogens of humans and livestock, but has been understudied in wildlife broadly. The trypanosomes that infect birds are in particular need of increased attention, as these parasites are abundant and globally distributed, yet few studies have addressed their evolutionary origins and diversity using modern molecular and analytical approaches. Of specific interest are the deep evolutionary relationships of the avian trypanosomes relative to the trypanosome species that are pathogenic in humans, as well as their species level diversity in regions where they have been understudied such as North America. Here, we address these unresolved areas of study using phylogenomic data for two species of avian trypanosomes that were isolated as "bycatch" from host transcriptome assemblies, as well as a large 18S DNA barcode sequence dataset that includes 143 novel avian Trypanosoma 18S sequences from North America. Using a phylogenomic approach, we find that the avian trypanosomes are nested within a clade of primarily mammalian trypanosomes that includes the human pathogen Trypanosoma cruzi, and are paraphyletic with respect to the ruminant trypanosome Trypanosoma theileri. DNA barcode sequences showed that T. avium and an unidentified small, non-striated trypanosome that was morphologically similar to T. everetti are each represented by highly abundant and divergent 18S haplotypes in North America. Community-level sampling revealed that additional species-level Trypanosoma lineages exist in this region. We compared the newly sequenced DNA barcodes from North America to a global database, and found that avian Trypanosoma 18S haplotypes generally exhibited a marked lack of host specificity with at least one T. avium haplotype having an intercontinental distribution. This highly abundant T. avium haplotype appears to have a remarkably high dispersal ability and cosmopolitan capacity to evade avian host immune defenses, which warrant further study.
真核生物血寄生虫属锥虫包括几种重要的人类和家畜病原体,但在野生动物中研究甚少。感染鸟类的锥虫尤其需要更多关注,因为这些寄生虫数量丰富且分布广泛,但很少有研究使用现代分子和分析方法来探讨它们的进化起源和多样性。特别感兴趣的是,相对于对人类致病的锥虫物种,鸟类锥虫的深层进化关系,以及在北美的一些研究不足的地区,它们的物种多样性。在这里,我们使用从宿主转录组组装中作为“副产物”分离的两种鸟类锥虫的基因组数据以及包括 143 个北美新的鸟类锥虫 18S 序列的大型 18S DNA 条码序列数据集来解决这些未解决的研究领域。使用系统基因组学方法,我们发现鸟类锥虫嵌套在主要哺乳动物锥虫的一个分支内,其中包括人类病原体克氏锥虫,并且相对于反刍动物锥虫锥虫是并系的。DNA 条码序列表明,T. avium 和一种形态上与 T. everetti 相似的未鉴定的小非条纹锥虫在北美的每个 18S 单倍型都代表着高度丰富和多样化的 18S 单倍型。群落水平采样表明,该地区还存在其他物种水平的锥虫谱系。我们将新测序的北美的 DNA 条码与全球数据库进行比较,发现鸟类锥虫 18S 单倍型通常表现出明显的宿主特异性缺乏,至少有一种 T. avium 单倍型具有洲际分布。这种高度丰富的 T. avium 单倍型似乎具有非凡的高扩散能力和世界性的能力来逃避鸟类宿主的免疫防御,这值得进一步研究。