United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Animal Parasitic Diseases Laboratory, Beltsville, MD 20705, USA.
Department of Parasitology and Invasive Diseases, National Veterinary Research Institute in Pulawy, Al. Partyzantow 57, 24-100 Pulawy, Poland.
Infect Genet Evol. 2021 Mar;88:104705. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2021.104705. Epub 2021 Jan 6.
Available evidence suggests that Trichinella spiralis first originated in Asia and subsequently spread to the rest of the world. Notably limited genetic diversity in European T. spiralis isolates indicates that the parasite went through a dramatic genetic bottleneck at some point in its history. Did this genetic bottleneck result from the transport of a limited number of T. spiralis infected pigs from Asian centers of domestication, or was the parasite resident in Europe far earlier than the domestication of pigs there? In order to explore this hypothesis, we generated complete mitochondrial genomes and ribosomal DNAs from seventeen European T. spiralis isolates, six North American isolates and seven Asian isolates using next generation sequencing. A total of 13,858 base pairs of mitochondrial DNA and 7431 nucleotides of the nuclear ribosomal DNA sequence from each isolate were aligned and subjected to phylogenetic analysis using T. nelsoni as an outgroup. We confirmed that North American and European isolates were tightly clustered within a single "western clade" and all Chinese T. spiralis isolates were placed within a well-supported sister clade. These results indicate that European T. spiralis did not directly descend from extant Chinese parasite populations. Furthermore, the amount of nucleotide divergence between the two clades suggests that they diverged before pigs were domesticated. Over evolutionary time periods, Chinese and European T. spiralis were likely maintained as separate populations. The data presented here indicates the genetic bottleneck observed in European T. spiralis did not result from a small number of founders introduced with Chinese pigs in the recent past, but derives from an earlier bottleneck in host populations associated with the end of the last glacial maximum.
现有证据表明,旋毛虫最初起源于亚洲,随后传播到世界其他地区。欧洲旋毛虫分离株的遗传多样性有限,表明寄生虫在其历史上的某个时刻经历了剧烈的遗传瓶颈。这种遗传瓶颈是由于从亚洲驯化中心运输的数量有限的感染旋毛虫的猪,还是寄生虫在那里养猪之前就已经存在于欧洲?为了探索这一假说,我们使用下一代测序技术从 17 个欧洲旋毛虫分离株、6 个北美分离株和 7 个亚洲分离株中生成了完整的线粒体基因组和核糖体 DNA。从每个分离株中总共对齐了 13858 个碱基对的线粒体 DNA 和核核糖体 DNA 序列的 7431 个核苷酸,并使用 T. nelsoni 作为外群进行了系统发育分析。我们证实,北美和欧洲分离株紧密聚集在单个“西部分支”内,所有中国旋毛虫分离株都位于一个支持良好的姐妹分支内。这些结果表明,欧洲旋毛虫并非直接源自现存的中国寄生虫种群。此外,两个分支之间核苷酸分歧的数量表明,它们在猪被驯化之前就已经分化了。在进化时期,中国和欧洲的旋毛虫可能作为独立的种群得以维持。这里呈现的数据表明,在欧洲旋毛虫中观察到的遗传瓶颈不是由最近引入中国猪的少数创始者引起的,而是源自与最后一个冰河时代末期相关的宿主种群的早期瓶颈。