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Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin

Leishmania infantum (syn. L. chagasi) is the causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) in the New World (NW) with endemic regions extending from southern USA to northern Argentina. The two hypotheses about the origin of VL in the NW suggest (1) recent importation of L. infantum from the Old Wor...

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Autores principales: Kuhls, Katrin, Alam, Mohammad Zahangir, Cupolillo, Elisa, Ferreira, Gabriel Eduardo M., Mauricio, Isabel L., Oddone, Rolando, Feliciangeli, M. Dora, Wirth, Thierry, Miles, Michael A., Schönian, Gabriele
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3110170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21666787
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001155
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author Kuhls, Katrin
Alam, Mohammad Zahangir
Cupolillo, Elisa
Ferreira, Gabriel Eduardo M.
Mauricio, Isabel L.
Oddone, Rolando
Feliciangeli, M. Dora
Wirth, Thierry
Miles, Michael A.
Schönian, Gabriele
author_facet Kuhls, Katrin
Alam, Mohammad Zahangir
Cupolillo, Elisa
Ferreira, Gabriel Eduardo M.
Mauricio, Isabel L.
Oddone, Rolando
Feliciangeli, M. Dora
Wirth, Thierry
Miles, Michael A.
Schönian, Gabriele
author_sort Kuhls, Katrin
collection PubMed
description Leishmania infantum (syn. L. chagasi) is the causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) in the New World (NW) with endemic regions extending from southern USA to northern Argentina. The two hypotheses about the origin of VL in the NW suggest (1) recent importation of L. infantum from the Old World (OW), or (2) an indigenous origin and a distinct taxonomic rank for the NW parasite. Multilocus microsatellite typing was applied in a survey of 98 L. infantum isolates from different NW foci. The microsatellite profiles obtained were compared to those of 308 L. infantum and 20 L. donovani strains from OW countries previously assigned to well-defined populations. Two main populations were identified for both NW and OW L. infantum. Most of the NW strains belonged to population 1, which corresponded to the OW MON-1 population. However, the NW population was much more homogeneous. A second, more heterogeneous, population comprised most Caribbean strains and corresponded to the OW non-MON-1 population. All Brazilian L. infantum strains belonged to population 1, although they represented 61% of the sample and originated from 9 states. Population analysis including the OW L. infantum populations indicated that the NW strains were more similar to MON-1 and non-MON-1 sub-populations of L. infantum from southwest Europe, than to any other OW sub-population. Moreover, similarity between NW and Southwest European L. infantum was higher than between OW L. infantum from distinct parts of the Mediterranean region, Middle East and Central Asia. No correlation was found between NW L. infantum genotypes and clinical picture or host background. This study represents the first continent-wide analysis of NW L. infantum population structure. It confirmed that the agent of VL in the NW is L. infantum and that the parasite has been recently imported multiple times to the NW from southwest Europe.
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spelling pubmed-31101702011-06-10 Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin Kuhls, Katrin Alam, Mohammad Zahangir Cupolillo, Elisa Ferreira, Gabriel Eduardo M. Mauricio, Isabel L. Oddone, Rolando Feliciangeli, M. Dora Wirth, Thierry Miles, Michael A. Schönian, Gabriele PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Leishmania infantum (syn. L. chagasi) is the causative agent of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) in the New World (NW) with endemic regions extending from southern USA to northern Argentina. The two hypotheses about the origin of VL in the NW suggest (1) recent importation of L. infantum from the Old World (OW), or (2) an indigenous origin and a distinct taxonomic rank for the NW parasite. Multilocus microsatellite typing was applied in a survey of 98 L. infantum isolates from different NW foci. The microsatellite profiles obtained were compared to those of 308 L. infantum and 20 L. donovani strains from OW countries previously assigned to well-defined populations. Two main populations were identified for both NW and OW L. infantum. Most of the NW strains belonged to population 1, which corresponded to the OW MON-1 population. However, the NW population was much more homogeneous. A second, more heterogeneous, population comprised most Caribbean strains and corresponded to the OW non-MON-1 population. All Brazilian L. infantum strains belonged to population 1, although they represented 61% of the sample and originated from 9 states. Population analysis including the OW L. infantum populations indicated that the NW strains were more similar to MON-1 and non-MON-1 sub-populations of L. infantum from southwest Europe, than to any other OW sub-population. Moreover, similarity between NW and Southwest European L. infantum was higher than between OW L. infantum from distinct parts of the Mediterranean region, Middle East and Central Asia. No correlation was found between NW L. infantum genotypes and clinical picture or host background. This study represents the first continent-wide analysis of NW L. infantum population structure. It confirmed that the agent of VL in the NW is L. infantum and that the parasite has been recently imported multiple times to the NW from southwest Europe. Public Library of Science 2011-06-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3110170/ /pubmed/21666787 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001155 Text en Kuhls et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kuhls, Katrin
Alam, Mohammad Zahangir
Cupolillo, Elisa
Ferreira, Gabriel Eduardo M.
Mauricio, Isabel L.
Oddone, Rolando
Feliciangeli, M. Dora
Wirth, Thierry
Miles, Michael A.
Schönian, Gabriele
Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin
title Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin
title_full Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin
title_fullStr Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin
title_short Comparative Microsatellite Typing of New World Leishmania infantum Reveals Low Heterogeneity among Populations and Its Recent Old World Origin
title_sort comparative microsatellite typing of new world leishmania infantum reveals low heterogeneity among populations and its recent old world origin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3110170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21666787
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001155
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