Literature DB >> 15013741

Initial steps of speciation by geographic isolation and host switch in salmonid pathogen Gyrodactylus salaris (Monogenea: Gyrodactylidae).

Maria Meinilä1, Jussi Kuusela, Marek S Zietara, Jaakko Lumme.   

Abstract

To test the hypothesis that host-switching can be an important step in the speciation of gyrodactylid monogenean flatworms, we inferred the phylogeny within a cluster of parasites morphologically close to Gyrodactylus salaris Malmberg 1957, collected from Atlantic, Baltic and White Sea salmon (Salmo salar), farmed rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), and grayling (Thymallus thymallus) from Northern Europe. The internal transcribed spacer region of the nuclear ribosomal gene was sequenced for taxonomic identification. Parasites on grayling from the White Sea Basin differed from the others by one nucleotide (0.08%), the remainder were identical to the sequence published earlier from Norway (G. salaris on salmon), England (Gyrodactylus thymalli on grayling), and the Czech Republic (unidentified salaris/thymalli on trout). For increased resolution, 813 nucleotides of the mitochondrial COI gene of 88 parasites were sequenced and compared with 76 published sequences using phylogenetic analysis. For all tree building algorithms (NJ, MP), the parasites formed a star-like phylogeny of six definite sister clades, indicating nearly simultaneous radiation. Average K2P distances between clades were 1.8-2.6%, and internal mean distances 0.2-1.1%. The genetic distance to the nearest known relative, Gyrodactylus lavareti Malmberg, was 24%. A variable salmon-specific mitochondrial Clade I was observed both in the Baltic Basin and in pathogenic populations introduced to the Atlantic and White Sea coasts. An invariable Clade II was common in rainbow trout farms in Sweden, Denmark and Finland; the same haplotype was also infecting salmon in a landlocked population in Russian Karelia, and in Oslo fjord and Sognefjord in Norway. Four geographically vicariant sister clades were observed on graylings: Clade III in the Baltic Sea Basin; Clade IV in Karelian rivers draining to the White Sea; Clade V in Norwegian river draining to Swedish lake Vänern; and Clade VI in rivers draining to Oslo fjord. The pattern fitted perfectly with the postglacial history of grayling distribution. Widely sampled clades from salmon and Baltic grayling had basal haplotypes in populations, which were isolated early during the postglacial recolonisation. The divergence between the six clades was clear and linked with their hosts, but not wide enough to support a species status for them. Parasites from the Slovakian type population of G. thymalli were not available, so this result does not mean that G. salaris and G. thymalli are synonyms. It is suggested that the plesiomorphic host of the parasite cluster was grayling, and the switch to salmon occurred at least once when the continental ice isolated Baltic salmon in an eastern freshwater refugium, 130,000 years ago. At the same time, parasites on grayling were split geographically and isolated into several allopatric refugia. The divergence among the parasite clades allowed a tentative calibration of the evolutionary rate, leading to an estimate of the divergence of 13.7-20.3% per million years for COI coding mtDNA. The results supported the hypothesis that parallel to the allopatric mode, host switch and instant isolation by host specificity can be operated as a speciation mechanism.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15013741     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2003.12.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Parasitol        ISSN: 0020-7519            Impact factor:   3.981


  25 in total

1.  Colonization of a novel host by fleas: changes in egg production and egg size.

Authors:  Nadezhda A Stavtseva; Laura J Fielden; Irina S Khokhlova; Elizabeth M Warburton; Luther van der Mescht; Boris R Krasnov
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2021-01-15       Impact factor: 2.289

2.  Species delimitation of Gyrodactylus (Monogenea: Gyrodactylidae) infecting the southernmost cyprinids (Actinopterygii: Cyprinidae) in the New World.

Authors:  Carlos Daniel Pinacho-Pinacho; Miguel Calixto-Rojas; Adriana García-Vásquez; Ismael Guzmán-Valdivieso; Juan J Barrios-Gutiérrez; Miguel Rubio-Godoy
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 2.289

3.  Mitochondrial haplotype diversity of Gyrodactylus thymalli (Platyhelminthes; Monogenea): extended geographic sampling in United Kingdom, Poland, and Norway reveals further lineages.

Authors:  Haakon Hansen; Tor A Bakke; Lutz Bachmann
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2007-01-10       Impact factor: 2.289

4.  Ancient and modern genome shuffling: Reticulate mito-nuclear phylogeny of four related allopatric species of Gyrodactylus von Nordmann, 1832 (Monogenea: Gyrodactylidae), ectoparasites on the Eurasian minnow Phoxinus phoxinus (L.) (Cyprinidae).

Authors:  Jaakko Lumme; Marek S Ziętara; Dar'ya Lebedeva
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2017-01-27       Impact factor: 1.431

5.  Gyrodactylus lilianae n. sp. (Polyonchoinea: Gyrodactylidae) from Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard) (Siluriformes: Heptapteridae) from southern Brazil: a potential nuisance for aquaculture.

Authors:  Emanuel Razzolini; Anelise Levay Murari; Bernardo Baldisserotto; Walter A Boeger
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2019-05-13       Impact factor: 1.431

6.  Characterization of Oesophagostomum spp. from pigs in China by PCR-based approaches using genetic markers in the internal transcribed spacers of ribosomal DNA.

Authors:  Rui-Qing Lin; Xing-Quan Zhu; Dong-Xia Wei; Yan Deng; Wei Liu; Hui-Qun Song; An-Xing Li; Zhao-Rong Lun
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2007-02-22       Impact factor: 2.289

7.  Molecular faunistics of accidental infections of Gyrodactylus Nordmann, 1832 (Monogenea) parasitic on salmon Salmo salar L. and brown trout Salmo trutta L. in NW Russia.

Authors:  Marek S Zietara; Jussi Kuusela; Alexei Veselov; Jaakko Lumme
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2007-11-24       Impact factor: 1.431

8.  Mitochondrial DNA variation of a natural population of Gyrodactylus thymalli (Monogenea) from the type locality River Hnilec, Slovakia.

Authors:  Charlotte Lindqvist; Laetitia Plaisance; Tor A Bakke; Lutz Bachmann
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2007-08-12       Impact factor: 2.289

9.  Characterization of Cryptocaryon irritans isolates from marine fishes in Mainland China by ITS ribosomal DNA sequences.

Authors:  H Y Sun; X Q Zhu; M Q Xie; X Y Wu; A X Li; R Q Lin; H Q Song
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2006-03-08       Impact factor: 2.289

10.  AxPcoords & parallel AxParafit: statistical co-phylogenetic analyses on thousands of taxa.

Authors:  Alexandros Stamatakis; Alexander F Auch; Jan Meier-Kolthoff; Markus Göker
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2007-10-22       Impact factor: 3.169

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