| Literature DB >> 18925940 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Europe, the north-south downhill cline frequency of the chemokine receptor CCR5 allele with a 32-bp deletion (CCR5-Delta32) raises interesting questions for evolutionary biologists. We had suggested first that, in the past, the European colonizers, principally Romans, might have been instrumental of a progressively decrease of the frequencies southwards. Indeed, statistical analyses suggested strong negative correlations between the allele frequency and historical parameters including the colonization dates by Mediterranean civilisations. The gene flows from colonizers to native populations were extremely low but colonizers are responsible of the spread of several diseases suggesting that the dissemination of parasites in naive populations could have induced a breakdown rupture of the fragile pathocenosis changing the balance among diseases. The new equilibrium state has been reached through a negative selection of the null allele.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18925940 PMCID: PMC2575341 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-5-119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Figure 1Geographic distribution of the . In (A), only the frequencies of Native populations have been evidenced in America, Asia, Africa and Oceania. Map redrawn and modified from [4,5]. In (B), the black areas correspond to the range of wild individuals bearing species-specific FIVs in a given continent, America: bobcat, jaguarundi, ocelot and puma; Asia: Pallas cat; Africa: cheetah, leopard and lion. The pale grey areas correspond to the range where individuals of these species have been found seronegative or when their serological status is unknown in a given continent (Asia: cheetah, leopard and lion; Europe: leopard and lion). Areas where these last three species lived in sympatry with Pallas cat are in dark grey. The historical ranges are approximate by 500 BC for Europe, North Africa and Western Asia; since the European settlement in America, and during the 1500's to the beginning of the 1900's in the remainder of Africa, Asia and Oceania. These data were principally inferred from [65-71].
List of actual felids and hyanids and their FIV status
| Feloidea: Felid lineages and Hyaenidae | Species | Animal | Distribution (formerly widespread) | FIV status (Western) | FIV status (PCR) | First-known taming dates |
| Wildcat | European wildcat | Europe, S.W. Asia | + fr | + | N.D. | |
| Northern African wildcat | Africa, Middle East | + fr | N.D. | <2000 B.C. | ||
| Asian wildcat | W. and C. Asia | + fr | - | <2000 B.C. | ||
| Chinese steppe cat | China | N.D. | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| Jungle cat | S. and S.E. Asia, Middle East, Egypt | +/- wb, cb | - | <2000 B.C. | ||
| Sand cat | Africa, Arabia, S.W. Asia | + fr | - | N.D. | ||
| Black-footed cat | Africa | +/- cb | - | N.D. | ||
| Leopard cat | Leopard cat | E. and S.E. Asia, India | + wb | + | N.D. | |
| Flat-headed cat | Malatya, Sumatra, Borneo | + fr | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| Rusty-spotted cat | India, Sri Lanka | - wb | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| Fishing cat | S.E. Asia, N.E. India | + cb | - | N.D. | ||
| C. and W. Asia | + e, fr | + | <1000 A.D. | |||
| Puma | N. and S. America | + e, fr | + fr | <1500 A.D. | ||
| Mexico, C. and S. America | + fr | + fr | <1000 A.D. | |||
| Africa, Asia Minor, India, W. Asia | + e, fr | + fr | <2000 B.C. | |||
| Lynx | Canada lynx | N. America | - fr | N.D. | N.D. | |
| Eurasian lynx | Europe and Asia | - wb | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| Iberian lynx | Spain and Portugal | - fr | - | N.D. | ||
| N. America | + e, fr | + | N.D. | |||
| Ocelot | C. and S. America, Mexico | + fr | + | <1500 A.D. | ||
| Pampas cat | S. America | + fr | - | N.D. | ||
| Geoffroy's cat | S. America | + e, fr | - | <1500 A.D. | ||
| Kodkod | C. Chile, Andean Argentina | - cb | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| Andean mountain cat | Parts of Andes | N.D. | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| Tigrina | S. America | + e, fr | - | N.D. | ||
| Margay | C. and S. America | + e, fr | + | <1500 A.D. | ||
| Caracal | Caracal | Africa, Middle East, S.W. Asia | - wb, cb | N.D. | <1500 A.D. | |
| African golden cat | Africa | +/- wb, cb | - | N.D. | ||
| Serval | Africa | - fr | N.D. | <1500 A.D. | ||
| Bay cat | Bornean bay cat | Borneo | - cb | N.D. | N.D. | |
| Asian golden cat | Asia | +/- wb, cb | - | N.D. | ||
| Marbled cat | S.E. Asia | +/- wb, cb | - | N.D. | ||
| Panthera | Africa | + e, fr | + | <2000 B.C. | ||
| Lion | S.W. Asia | + cb | + | <2000 B.C. | ||
| Jaguar | Mexico, C. and S. America | + e, fr | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| Africa | + fr | + | <2000 B.C. | |||
| Leopard | Asia | + cb | N.D. | <2000 B.C. | ||
| Tiger | India, E. and S.E. Asia | + cb | + | ~200 B.C. | ||
| Snow leopard | C. Asia | + wb | + | N.D. | ||
| Mainland clouded leopard | S.E. Asia | + cb | - | N.D. | ||
| Sunda Island clouded leopard | Sumatra and Borneo | N.D. | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| Spotted hyena | Africa, S. of the Sahara | + e, fr | + fr | N.D. | ||
| Striped hyena | Africa but S. Africa, S.W. Asia | + e, fr | - | <2000 B.C. | ||
| Brown hyena | S. Africa | - | N.D. | N.D. | ||
| aardwolf | S. and E. Africa | N.D. | N.D. | N.D. |
The data concerning taming dates and FIV status were inferred principally from the following references: [40,45,52,65,68,105-116] and [74,82,91,98,117] and references therein. Felid lineages are from Johnson et al. (2006) [81]. The names of the two sub-families of the Hyaenidae are in italic. In bold letters, species with their specific FIV strains. Abbreviations: concerning species, G S-H, Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire; concerning the distribution, C., central; E., East; N., North; S., South; concerning the FIV status, +, positive; -, negative; +/-, indeterminate; cb, captive-born (generally zoo animals); e, endemic; fr, free ranging; N.D., not done; wb, wild-born zoo animal.
Figure 2Viral-host co-evolution. The tree on the left shows observed viral sequence relationships [82,91] and references therein) and the tree on the right represents host species relationships [81]. FIV polymerase sequences (158 amino acids included in analysis) were analyzed phylogenetically from nine feline species representing six out of the eight feline lineages [81]. Asterisks indicate significant bootstrap values (≥ 70%). The branch lengths are not in scale. Numbers next to node define estimated time of divergence for each the felid lineages and for the Felidae/Hyaenidae split in million years.