Mammalogy Department, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Department of Biology, Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA; Zoology Department, Denver Museum of Nature & Science, Denver, CO, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Nevada Reno, Reno, NV, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2021 Feb;155:106998. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2020.106998. Epub 2020 Oct 29.
The evolution of obligate parasites is often interpreted in light of their hosts' evolutionary history. An expanded approach is to examine the histories of multiple lineages of parasites that inhabit similar environments on a particular host lineage. Western North American chipmunks (genus Tamias) have a broad distribution, a history of divergence with gene flow, and host two species of sucking lice (Anoplura), Hoplopleura arboricola and Neohaematopinus pacificus. From total genomic sequencing, we obtained sequences of over 1100 loci sampled across the genomes of these lice to compare their evolutionary histories and examine the roles of host association in structuring louse relationships. Within each louse species, clades are largely associated with closely related chipmunk host species. Exceptions to this pattern appear to have a biogeographic component, but differ between the two louse species. Phylogenetic relationships among these major louse clades, in both species, are not congruent with chipmunk relationships. In the context of host associations, each louse lineage has a different evolutionary history, supporting the hypothesis that host-parasite assemblages vary both across the landscape and with the taxa under investigation. In addition, the louse Hoplopleura erratica (parasitizing the eastern Tamias striatus) is embedded within H. arboricola, rendering it paraphyletic. This phylogenetic result, together with comparable divergences within H. arboricola, indicate a need for taxonomic revision. Both host divergence and biogeographic components shape parasite diversification as demonstrated by the distinctive diversification patterns of these two independently evolving lineages that parasitize the same hosts.
专性寄生虫的进化通常是根据其宿主的进化历史来解释的。一种扩展的方法是研究栖息在特定宿主谱系上相似环境中的多种寄生虫谱系的历史。北美西部金花鼠(Tamias 属)分布广泛,与基因流分化历史悠久,宿主有两种吸虱(Anoplura),即 Arboricola 拟花蚤和 Neohaematopinus pacificus。通过全基因组测序,我们从这些虱子的基因组中获得了超过 1100 个位点的序列,以比较它们的进化历史,并研究宿主关联在构建虱子关系中的作用。在每个虱子物种中,进化枝主要与亲缘关系密切的金花鼠宿主物种相关联。这种模式的例外似乎具有生物地理成分,但在这两个虱子物种之间有所不同。这两种虱子物种中,这些主要虱子进化枝之间的系统发育关系与金花鼠的关系不一致。在宿主关联的背景下,每个虱子谱系都有不同的进化历史,支持宿主-寄生虫组合在景观和研究的分类群中都存在差异的假设。此外,寄生在东部金花鼠(Tamias striatus)上的拟花蚤(Hoplopleura erratica)嵌入在 Arboricola 拟花蚤中,使其成为并系群。这种系统发育结果,加上 Arboricola 拟花蚤内部的可比分化,表明需要进行分类修订。宿主分歧和生物地理成分共同塑造了寄生虫的多样化,这两个独立进化的寄生在同一宿主上的谱系表现出独特的多样化模式。