Environmental and Life Sciences Graduate Program, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada.
Forensic Science Undergraduate Program, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2021 Apr 8;16(4):e0249176. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249176. eCollection 2021.
Populations are exposed to different types and strains of pathogens across heterogeneous landscapes, where local interactions between host and pathogen may present reciprocal selective forces leading to correlated patterns of spatial genetic structure. Understanding these coevolutionary patterns provides insight into mechanisms of disease spread and maintenance. Arctic rabies (AR) is a lethal disease with viral variants that occupy distinct geographic distributions across North America and Europe. Red fox (Vulpes vulpes) are a highly susceptible AR host, whose range overlaps both geographically distinct AR strains and regions where AR is absent. It is unclear if genetic structure exists among red fox populations relative to the presence/absence of AR or the spatial distribution of AR variants. Acquiring these data may enhance our understanding of the role of red fox in AR maintenance/spread and inform disease control strategies. Using a genotyping-by-sequencing assay targeting 116 genomic regions of immunogenetic relevance, we screened for sequence variation among red fox populations from Alaska and an outgroup from Ontario, including areas with different AR variants, and regions where the disease was absent. Presumed neutral SNP data from the assay found negligible levels of neutral genetic structure among Alaskan populations. The immunogenetically-associated data identified 30 outlier SNPs supporting weak to moderate genetic structure between regions with and without AR in Alaska. The outliers included SNPs with the potential to cause missense mutations within several toll-like receptor genes that have been associated with AR outcome. In contrast, there was a lack of genetic structure between regions with different AR variants. Combined, we interpret these data to suggest red fox populations respond differently to the presence of AR, but not AR variants. This research increases our understanding of AR dynamics in the Arctic, where host/disease patterns are undergoing flux in a rapidly changing Arctic landscape, including the continued northward expansion of red fox into regions previously predominated by the arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus).
种群在异质的景观中暴露于不同类型和菌株的病原体,宿主和病原体之间的局部相互作用可能呈现出相互的选择压力,导致空间遗传结构的相关模式。了解这些协同进化模式可以深入了解疾病传播和维持的机制。北极狂犬病 (AR) 是一种致命疾病,其病毒变体在北美和欧洲的不同地理区域分布。红狐 (Vulpes vulpes) 是 AR 的高度易感宿主,其分布范围横跨地理上截然不同的 AR 菌株和 AR 不存在的区域。目前尚不清楚红狐种群相对于 AR 的存在/缺失或 AR 变体的空间分布是否存在遗传结构。获取这些数据可以增强我们对红狐在 AR 维持/传播中的作用的理解,并为疾病控制策略提供信息。使用针对 116 个免疫遗传相关基因组区域的测序基因分型检测,我们对来自阿拉斯加和安大略省的一个外群的红狐种群进行了序列变异筛选,包括具有不同 AR 变体的区域和 AR 不存在的区域。检测到的假定中性 SNP 数据显示,阿拉斯加种群中几乎不存在中性遗传结构。免疫遗传相关数据确定了 30 个异常 SNP,支持阿拉斯加 AR 存在和不存在的区域之间存在弱到中度遗传结构。这些异常包括在几个 Toll 样受体基因中具有潜在导致错义突变的 SNP,这些基因与 AR 结果有关。相比之下,不同 AR 变体的区域之间没有遗传结构。总的来说,我们解释这些数据表明,红狐种群对 AR 的存在反应不同,但对 AR 变体没有反应。这项研究增加了我们对北极地区 AR 动态的理解,在这个地区,宿主/疾病模式正在快速变化的北极景观中发生变化,包括红狐向北扩展到以前由北极狐 (Vulpes lagopus) 主导的地区。