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Molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of Baylisascaris

Nucleotide sequences representing nine genes and five presumptive genetic loci were used to infer phylogenetic relationships among seven Baylisascaris species, including one species with no previously available molecular data. These genes were used to test the species status of B. procyonis and B. c...

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Autores principales: Camp, Lauren E., Radke, Marc R., Shihabi, Danny M., Pagan, Christopher, Yang, Guangyou, Nadler, Steven A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6275171/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30568876
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2018.09.010
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author Camp, Lauren E.
Radke, Marc R.
Shihabi, Danny M.
Pagan, Christopher
Yang, Guangyou
Nadler, Steven A.
author_facet Camp, Lauren E.
Radke, Marc R.
Shihabi, Danny M.
Pagan, Christopher
Yang, Guangyou
Nadler, Steven A.
author_sort Camp, Lauren E.
collection PubMed
description Nucleotide sequences representing nine genes and five presumptive genetic loci were used to infer phylogenetic relationships among seven Baylisascaris species, including one species with no previously available molecular data. These genes were used to test the species status of B. procyonis and B. columnaris using a coalescent approach. Phylogenetic analysis based on combined analysis of sequence data strongly supported monophyly of the genus and separated the species into two main clades. Clade 1 included B. procyonis, B. columnaris, and B. devosi, species hosted by musteloid carnivores. Clade 2 included B. transfuga and B. schroederi from ursids, B. ailuri, a species from the red panda (a musteloid), and B. tasmaniensis from a marsupial. Within clade 2, geographic isolates of B. transfuga, B. schroederi (from giant panda), and B. ailuri formed a strongly supported clade. In certain analyses (e.g., some single genes), B. tasmaniensis was sister to all other Baylisascaris species rather than sister to the species from ursids and red panda. Using one combination of priors corresponding to moderate population size and shallow genetic divergence, the multispecies coalescent analysis of B. procyonis and B. columnaris yielded moderate support (posterior probability 0.91) for these taxa as separate species. However, other prior combinations yielded weak or no support for delimiting these taxa as separate species. Similarly, tree topologies constrained to represent reciprocal monophyly of B. columnaris and B. procyonis individuals (topologies consistent with separate species) were significantly worse in some cases, but not others, depending on the dataset analyzed. An expanded analysis of SNPs and other genetic markers that were previously suggested to distinguish between individuals of B. procyonis and B. columnaris was made by characterization of additional individual nematodes. The results suggest that many of these SNPs do not represent fixed differences between nematodes derived from raccoon and skunk hosts.
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spelling pubmed-62751712018-12-19 Molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of Baylisascaris Camp, Lauren E. Radke, Marc R. Shihabi, Danny M. Pagan, Christopher Yang, Guangyou Nadler, Steven A. Int J Parasitol Parasites Wildl Article Nucleotide sequences representing nine genes and five presumptive genetic loci were used to infer phylogenetic relationships among seven Baylisascaris species, including one species with no previously available molecular data. These genes were used to test the species status of B. procyonis and B. columnaris using a coalescent approach. Phylogenetic analysis based on combined analysis of sequence data strongly supported monophyly of the genus and separated the species into two main clades. Clade 1 included B. procyonis, B. columnaris, and B. devosi, species hosted by musteloid carnivores. Clade 2 included B. transfuga and B. schroederi from ursids, B. ailuri, a species from the red panda (a musteloid), and B. tasmaniensis from a marsupial. Within clade 2, geographic isolates of B. transfuga, B. schroederi (from giant panda), and B. ailuri formed a strongly supported clade. In certain analyses (e.g., some single genes), B. tasmaniensis was sister to all other Baylisascaris species rather than sister to the species from ursids and red panda. Using one combination of priors corresponding to moderate population size and shallow genetic divergence, the multispecies coalescent analysis of B. procyonis and B. columnaris yielded moderate support (posterior probability 0.91) for these taxa as separate species. However, other prior combinations yielded weak or no support for delimiting these taxa as separate species. Similarly, tree topologies constrained to represent reciprocal monophyly of B. columnaris and B. procyonis individuals (topologies consistent with separate species) were significantly worse in some cases, but not others, depending on the dataset analyzed. An expanded analysis of SNPs and other genetic markers that were previously suggested to distinguish between individuals of B. procyonis and B. columnaris was made by characterization of additional individual nematodes. The results suggest that many of these SNPs do not represent fixed differences between nematodes derived from raccoon and skunk hosts. Elsevier 2018-10-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6275171/ /pubmed/30568876 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2018.09.010 Text en © 2018 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Camp, Lauren E.
Radke, Marc R.
Shihabi, Danny M.
Pagan, Christopher
Yang, Guangyou
Nadler, Steven A.
Molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of Baylisascaris
title Molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of Baylisascaris
title_full Molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of Baylisascaris
title_fullStr Molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of Baylisascaris
title_full_unstemmed Molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of Baylisascaris
title_short Molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of Baylisascaris
title_sort molecular phylogenetics and species-level systematics of baylisascaris
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6275171/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30568876
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2018.09.010
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