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Multigenomic Delineation of Plasmodium Species of the Laverania Subgenus Infecting Wild-Living Chimpanzees and Gorillas

Plasmodium falciparum, the major cause of malaria morbidity and mortality worldwide, is only distantly related to other human malaria parasites and has thus been placed in a separate subgenus, termed Laverania. Parasites morphologically similar to P. falciparum have been identified in African apes,...

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Autores principales: Liu, Weimin, Sundararaman, Sesh A., Loy, Dorothy E., Learn, Gerald H., Li, Yingying, Plenderleith, Lindsey J., Ndjango, Jean-Bosco N., Speede, Sheri, Atencia, Rebeca, Cox, Debby, Shaw, George M., Ayouba, Ahidjo, Peeters, Martine, Rayner, Julian C., Hahn, Beatrice H., Sharp, Paul M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27289102
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evw128
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author Liu, Weimin
Sundararaman, Sesh A.
Loy, Dorothy E.
Learn, Gerald H.
Li, Yingying
Plenderleith, Lindsey J.
Ndjango, Jean-Bosco N.
Speede, Sheri
Atencia, Rebeca
Cox, Debby
Shaw, George M.
Ayouba, Ahidjo
Peeters, Martine
Rayner, Julian C.
Hahn, Beatrice H.
Sharp, Paul M.
author_facet Liu, Weimin
Sundararaman, Sesh A.
Loy, Dorothy E.
Learn, Gerald H.
Li, Yingying
Plenderleith, Lindsey J.
Ndjango, Jean-Bosco N.
Speede, Sheri
Atencia, Rebeca
Cox, Debby
Shaw, George M.
Ayouba, Ahidjo
Peeters, Martine
Rayner, Julian C.
Hahn, Beatrice H.
Sharp, Paul M.
author_sort Liu, Weimin
collection PubMed
description Plasmodium falciparum, the major cause of malaria morbidity and mortality worldwide, is only distantly related to other human malaria parasites and has thus been placed in a separate subgenus, termed Laverania. Parasites morphologically similar to P. falciparum have been identified in African apes, but only one other Laverania species, Plasmodium reichenowi from chimpanzees, has been formally described. Although recent studies have pointed to the existence of additional Laverania species, their precise number and host associations remain uncertain, primarily because of limited sampling and a paucity of parasite sequences other than from mitochondrial DNA. To address this, we used limiting dilution polymerase chain reaction to amplify additional parasite sequences from a large number of chimpanzee and gorilla blood and fecal samples collected at two sanctuaries and 30 field sites across equatorial Africa. Phylogenetic analyses of more than 2,000 new sequences derived from the mitochondrial, nuclear, and apicoplast genomes revealed six divergent and well-supported clades within the Laverania parasite group. Although two of these clades exhibited deep subdivisions in phylogenies estimated from organelle gene sequences, these sublineages were geographically defined and not present in trees from four unlinked nuclear loci. This greatly expanded sequence data set thus confirms six, and not seven or more, ape Laverania species, of which P. reichenowi, Plasmodium gaboni, and Plasmodium billcollinsi only infect chimpanzees, whereas Plasmodium praefalciparum, Plasmodium adleri, and Pladmodium blacklocki only infect gorillas. The new sequence data also confirm the P. praefalciparum origin of human P. falciparum.
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spelling pubmed-49431992016-07-14 Multigenomic Delineation of Plasmodium Species of the Laverania Subgenus Infecting Wild-Living Chimpanzees and Gorillas Liu, Weimin Sundararaman, Sesh A. Loy, Dorothy E. Learn, Gerald H. Li, Yingying Plenderleith, Lindsey J. Ndjango, Jean-Bosco N. Speede, Sheri Atencia, Rebeca Cox, Debby Shaw, George M. Ayouba, Ahidjo Peeters, Martine Rayner, Julian C. Hahn, Beatrice H. Sharp, Paul M. Genome Biol Evol Letter Plasmodium falciparum, the major cause of malaria morbidity and mortality worldwide, is only distantly related to other human malaria parasites and has thus been placed in a separate subgenus, termed Laverania. Parasites morphologically similar to P. falciparum have been identified in African apes, but only one other Laverania species, Plasmodium reichenowi from chimpanzees, has been formally described. Although recent studies have pointed to the existence of additional Laverania species, their precise number and host associations remain uncertain, primarily because of limited sampling and a paucity of parasite sequences other than from mitochondrial DNA. To address this, we used limiting dilution polymerase chain reaction to amplify additional parasite sequences from a large number of chimpanzee and gorilla blood and fecal samples collected at two sanctuaries and 30 field sites across equatorial Africa. Phylogenetic analyses of more than 2,000 new sequences derived from the mitochondrial, nuclear, and apicoplast genomes revealed six divergent and well-supported clades within the Laverania parasite group. Although two of these clades exhibited deep subdivisions in phylogenies estimated from organelle gene sequences, these sublineages were geographically defined and not present in trees from four unlinked nuclear loci. This greatly expanded sequence data set thus confirms six, and not seven or more, ape Laverania species, of which P. reichenowi, Plasmodium gaboni, and Plasmodium billcollinsi only infect chimpanzees, whereas Plasmodium praefalciparum, Plasmodium adleri, and Pladmodium blacklocki only infect gorillas. The new sequence data also confirm the P. praefalciparum origin of human P. falciparum. Oxford University Press 2016-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4943199/ /pubmed/27289102 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evw128 Text en © The Author(s) 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Letter
Liu, Weimin
Sundararaman, Sesh A.
Loy, Dorothy E.
Learn, Gerald H.
Li, Yingying
Plenderleith, Lindsey J.
Ndjango, Jean-Bosco N.
Speede, Sheri
Atencia, Rebeca
Cox, Debby
Shaw, George M.
Ayouba, Ahidjo
Peeters, Martine
Rayner, Julian C.
Hahn, Beatrice H.
Sharp, Paul M.
Multigenomic Delineation of Plasmodium Species of the Laverania Subgenus Infecting Wild-Living Chimpanzees and Gorillas
title Multigenomic Delineation of Plasmodium Species of the Laverania Subgenus Infecting Wild-Living Chimpanzees and Gorillas
title_full Multigenomic Delineation of Plasmodium Species of the Laverania Subgenus Infecting Wild-Living Chimpanzees and Gorillas
title_fullStr Multigenomic Delineation of Plasmodium Species of the Laverania Subgenus Infecting Wild-Living Chimpanzees and Gorillas
title_full_unstemmed Multigenomic Delineation of Plasmodium Species of the Laverania Subgenus Infecting Wild-Living Chimpanzees and Gorillas
title_short Multigenomic Delineation of Plasmodium Species of the Laverania Subgenus Infecting Wild-Living Chimpanzees and Gorillas
title_sort multigenomic delineation of plasmodium species of the laverania subgenus infecting wild-living chimpanzees and gorillas
topic Letter
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27289102
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evw128
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