| Literature DB >> 21463708 |
Etienne Waleckx1, Renata Salas, Nerida Huamán, Rosio Buitrago, Marie-France Bosseno, Claudia Aliaga, Christian Barnabé, Roberto Rodriguez, Faustine Zoveda, Marcelo Monje, Marianne Baune, Sergio Quisberth, Erick Villena, Pierre Kengne, François Noireau, Simone Frédérique Brenière.
Abstract
Triatoma infestans is the main and most widespread vector of Chagas disease in South America. For the first time, a large sample of sylvatic populations of T. infestans was analyzed by ITS-2 and mtCytB sequencing. ITS-2 showed a low level of polymorphism but revealed a dichotomy between the Andean and non-Andean sylvatic populations. On the contrary, mtCytB sequences showed a high polymorphism (19 haplotypes determined by 35 variable sites) revealing a strong structuring between most of the sylvatic populations and possible ancient isolation and bottleneck in the Northern Andes. The dichotomy Andean vs. non-Andean populations was not observed with this marker. Moreover, mtCytB haplotype genealogies showed that the non-Andean haplotypes would have derived from the Andean ones, supporting somewhat an Andean origin of the species. Nevertheless, a non-Andean origin could not be discarded because a remarkable genetic diversity was found in the non-Andean sample. The comparison of the sylvatic haplotypes with the domestic ones from GenBank suggested multiple events of T. infestans domestication in Andean and non-Andean areas, instead of a major and unique domestication event in the Bolivian Andes, as previously proposed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21463708 DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2011.03.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Genet Evol ISSN: 1567-1348 Impact factor: 3.342