Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Colorado State University, 1021 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA; Department of Biology, Colorado State University, 1878 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA; Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Bacterial Diseases Branch, Division of Vector-Borne Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 3156 Rampart Road, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA.
Infect Genet Evol. 2021 Apr;89:104719. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2021.104719. Epub 2021 Jan 11.
Bats are notorious reservoirs of several zoonotic diseases and may be uniquely tolerant of infection among mammals. Broad sampling has revealed the importance of bats in the diversification and spread of viruses and eukaryotes to other animal hosts. Vector-borne bacteria of the genus Bartonella are prevalent and diverse in mammals globally and recent surveys have revealed numerous Bartonella lineages in bats. We assembled a sequence database of Bartonella strains, consisting of nine genetic loci from 209 previously characterized Bartonella lineages and 121 new cultured isolates from bats, and used these data to perform a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the Bartonella genus. This analysis included estimation of divergence dates using a molecular clock and ancestral reconstruction of host associations and geography. We estimate that Bartonella began infecting mammals 62 million years ago near the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary. Additionally, the radiation of particular Bartonella clades correlate strongly to the timing of diversification and biogeography of mammalian hosts. Bats were inferred to be the ancestral hosts of all mammal-associated Bartonella and appear to be responsible for the early geographic expansion of the genus. We conclude that bats have had a deep influence on the evolutionary radiation of Bartonella bacteria and their spread to other mammalian orders. These results support a 'bat seeding' hypothesis that could explain similar evolutionary patterns in other mammalian parasite taxa. Application of such phylogenetic tools as we have used to other taxa may reveal the general importance of bats in the ancient diversification of mammalian parasites.
蝙蝠是臭名昭著的几种人畜共患病的宿主,而且可能是哺乳动物中对感染具有独特耐受性的物种。广泛的采样揭示了蝙蝠在病毒和真核生物向其他动物宿主的多样化和传播中的重要性。贝氏菌属的载体传播细菌在全球哺乳动物中普遍存在且多样化,最近的调查显示蝙蝠中有许多贝氏菌属谱系。我们组装了一个贝氏菌菌株的序列数据库,该数据库由 209 个先前表征的贝氏菌谱系的 9 个基因座和 121 个来自蝙蝠的新培养分离物组成,并使用这些数据对贝氏菌属进行了全面的系统发育分析。该分析包括使用分子钟估计分歧日期和宿主关联和地理的祖先重建。我们估计贝氏菌在 6200 万年前白垩纪-古近纪边界附近开始感染哺乳动物。此外,特定贝氏菌谱系的辐射与哺乳动物宿主的多样化和生物地理学时间密切相关。蝙蝠被推断为所有与哺乳动物相关的贝氏菌的原始宿主,并且似乎是该属早期地理扩张的原因。我们得出结论,蝙蝠对贝氏菌细菌的进化辐射及其向其他哺乳动物目传播产生了深远的影响。这些结果支持了“蝙蝠播种”假说,可以解释其他哺乳动物寄生虫类群中类似的进化模式。将我们使用的此类系统发育工具应用于其他分类群可能会揭示蝙蝠在哺乳动物寄生虫古老多样化中的普遍重要性。