| Literature DB >> 23457528 |
Dawn M Roellig1, Mason Y Savage, A Wendy Fujita, Christian Barnabé, Michel Tibayrenc, Frank J Steurer, Michael J Yabsley.
Abstract
Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease, is a multiclonal parasite with high levels of genetic diversity and broad host and geographic ranges. Molecular characterization of South American isolates of T. cruzi has demonstrated homologous recombination and nuclear hybridization, as well as the presence of 6 main genetic clusters or "discrete typing units" (DTUs). Few studies have extensively investigated such exchange events and genetic diversity in North American isolates. In the current study, we genetically characterized over 50 US isolates from wildlife reservoirs (e.g., raccoons, opossums, armadillos, skunks), domestic dogs, humans, nonhuman primates, and reduviid vectors from nine states (TX, CA, OK, SC, FL, GA, MD, LA, TN) using a multilocus sequencing method. Single nucleotide polymorphisms were identified in sequences of the mismatch-repair class 2 (MSH2) and Tc52 genes. Typing based on the two genes often paralleled genotyping by classic methodologies using mini-exon and 18S and 24Sα rRNA genes. Evidence for genetic exchange was obtained by comparing sequence phylogenies of nuclear and mitochondrial gene targets, dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase (DHFR-TS) and the cytochrome oxidase subunit II- NADH dehydrogenase subunit I region (COII-ND1), respectively. We observed genetic exchange in several US isolates as demonstrated by incongruent mitochondrial and nuclear genes phylogenies, which confirms a previous finding of a single genetic exchange event in a Florida isolate. The presence of SNPs and evidence of genetic exchange illustrates that strains from the US are genetically diverse, even though only two phylogenetic lineages have been identified in this region.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23457528 PMCID: PMC3572986 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0056198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Lineage typing of Trypanosoma cruzi isolates from the United States.
| Gene target | |||||||
| Host (Order) | Isolate | Origin | Lineage>> | Tc52 | MSH2 | DHFR-TS | COII-ND1 |
| Human | TC CC | Corpus Christi, TX | I | I | I | I | n.d. |
| (Primate) | CA R | California | I | I | I | I | I |
| TC California | Lake Don Pedro, TX | I | I | I | n.d. | I | |
| Domestic Dog | Caesar Dog | Not known | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV |
| (Carnivora) | Dog Theis | Not known | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV |
| Griffin Dog | Hillsboro, TN | I/IV | IV/I | IV/I | IV | I | |
| OK Dog | Bartlesville, OK | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| Samantha Dog | South Carolina | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| Smokey | South Carolina | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| USA Dog Y | California | IV | I | I | I | IV | |
| VA Opossum | 92101601P cl2 | Statesboro, GA | n.d. | I | I | I | IV |
| (Didelphimorphia) | 93041401P cl1 | Statesboro, GA | I | I | I | I | IV |
| 93070103P cl2 | Fort Stewart, GA | I | I | I | I | IV | |
| FH4 | South Georgia | I | I | I | I | IV | |
| FL Opo 2 | Wakulla Springs, FL | I | I | I | I | IV | |
| FL Opo 3 | Wakulla Springs, FL | I | I | I | I | IV | |
| FL Opo 15 | Maclay State Park, FL | I | I | I | n.d. | IV | |
| Opossum 1970 | New Orleans, LA | I | I | I | I | I | |
| USA Opossum | South Louisiana | I | I | I | I | I | |
| Raccoon | 92122102R | Statesboro, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV |
| (Carnivora) | 93040701R cl2 | Statesboro, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV |
| 93053103R cl3 | Harrold Preserve, GA | I | I | I | I | I | |
| 93071502R cl2 | Fort Stewart, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| 93072805R cl3 | Fort Stewart, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| FL Rac 13 | Maclay State Park, FL | I/IV | I | I | IV | n.d. | |
| FL Rac 15 | Wakulla Springs, FL | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| FL Rac 30 | Wakulla Springs, FL | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| FL Rac 46 | Tall Timbers, FL | IV | IV | IV | IV | n.d. | |
| FL Rac 5 | Torreya State Park, FL | IV | IV | IV | IV | n.d. | |
| FL Rac 7 | Lake Talquin, FL | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| FL Rac 9 | Torreya State Park, FL | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| GA Rac 107 | Ossabaw Island, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| GA Rac 134 | Whitehall Forest, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| GA Rac 143 | Athens, GA | IV | I | IV | IV | IV | |
| GA Rac 45 | Skidaway Island, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | n.d. | |
| GA Rac 69 | Athens, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| Maryland Rac | Laurel, MD | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| STC 10R cl3 | St. Catherine's Island, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| STC 35R | St. Catherine's Island, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| TN Rac 18 | Rutherford Co., TN | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
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| Florida | Gainesville, FL | I | I | I | I | n.d. |
| (Hemiptera) | Florida C1F8 | Gainesville, FL | I | I | I | I | IV |
| T. sang 5 cl1 | Bulloch Co., GA | I | IV | IV | IV | n.d. | |
| RT lemur | Nilda | St. Catherine's Island, GA | IV | IV | n.d. | IV | n.d. |
| (Primate) | Clarence | St. Catherine's Island, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV |
| Meg | St. Catherine's Island, GA | IV | IV | IV | n.d. | IV | |
| Rh. Macaque (Primate) | Texas Theis | Not known | I | IV | IV | n.d. | IV |
| Nb Armadillo (Cingulata) | Armadillo 1973 | New Orleans, LA | I | I | I | I | I |
| GA Arm 20 | Ossabaw Island, GA | IV | IV | IV | IV | IV | |
| USA Armadillo | South Louisiana | I | I | I | I | I | |
| Str. Skunk (Carnivora) | GA Sk 1 | Ludiwici, GA | IV | IV | IV | n.d. | IV |
Table abbreviations: VA opossum = Virginia Opossum; RT lemur = Ring-tailed Lemur; Rh. Macaque = Rhesus Macaque; Nb Armadillo = Nine-banded Armadillo; Str. Skunk = Striped Skunk; n.d. = not determined.
previously characterized using mini-exon, D7 divergent domain of 24 s alpha rRNA, and 18 s rRNA genetic analysis in [34].
partial sequences were analyzed.
Nucleotide sequence variations within the MSH2 gene sequence of 50 T. cruzi isolates from the United States compared to reference strains.
| Genotype/Isolate | Nucleotide Position | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 71 | 97 | 109 | 172 | 244 | 351 | 367 | 373 | 403 | 404 | 460 | 478 | 490 | 500 | 634 | 645 | 658 | 735 | 750 | 775 | 816 | |
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| C | A | G | A | C | T | A | G | G | G | A | T | C | A | T | C | A | C | A | G | A |
| TcI – 17 US sequences | • | • | • | • | • | A | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| TcI-USA Opossum | • | • | • | • | • | A | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | G |
| TcI-93070103P cl2 | • | • | • | • | • | A | • | • | • | • | • | Y | • | • | Y | S | • | • | T | • | • |
| Amino acid change | V→D | S→C | |||||||||||||||||||
Genotype of each isolate precedes the isolate name. Nucleotide positions correspond to sites from SilvioX10 cl1 (Genbank AY540739). Dots represent nucleotide site identical to reference strain (either Silvio X10 cl1 for TcI or CANIII cl1 for TcIV).
The following 17 US TcI sequences were identical: Human isolates (TC CC, CA R, TC California), domestic dogs (USA Dog Y), Virginia opossums (92101601P cl2, 93041401P cl2, FH4, FL Opo 2, FL Opo 3, FL Opo 15, Opossum 1970), armadillos (Armadillo 1973, USA Armadillo), triatomine bugs (Florida C1F8, Florida), and raccoons (93053103R cl3, FL Rac 13).
The following 23 US TcIV sequences were identical: Raccoons (FL Rac 9, 92122102R, 93071502R cl2, 93040701R cl1, 93072805R cl3, FL Rac 15, FL Rac 46, FL Rac 5, GA Rac 134, GA Rac 143, GA Rac 69, Maryland Rac, STC 35R), domestic dogs (Samantha Dog, Caesar Dog, Dog Theis, OK Dog, Smokey), ring-tailed lemurs (Clarence, Meg), rhesus macaque (Texas Theis), striped skunk (GA Sk 1), and armadillo (GA Arm 20).
Nucleotide sequence variations within the Tc52 gene sequence of 51 T. cruzi isolates from the United States compared to reference strains.
| Genotype/Isolate | Nucleotide Position | |||||||||||||||||
| 85 | 91 | 121 | 148 | 151–153 | 155–156 | 159–160 | 200 | 221 | 231 | 242 | 336 | 357 | 392 | 443 | 500 | 560 | 588 | |
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| C | A | T | G | ACA | GG | CT | A | A | T | T | A | C | T | G | A | G | A |
| TcI – 17 US sequences | • | • | • | • | ••• | •• | •• | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| TcI-TC California | • | • | • | • | ••• | •• | •• | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| TcI-93041401P cl1 | • | • | C | • | ••• | •• | •• | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| TcI-FL Opo 2 | • | • | • | • | ••• | •• | •• | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| Amino acid change | V→A | L→P | ||||||||||||||||
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| TcIIa- 27 US sequences | C | • | • | • | ••• | •• | •• | A | G | G | T | • | • | • | A | • | • | A |
| TcIIa-TN Rac 18 | C | C | • | A | GGT | CA | GA | A | G | G | T | • | • | • | A | • | • | A |
| TcIIa-FL Rac 7 | C | • | • | • | ••• | •• | •• | A | G | G | T | • | • | • | A | • | A | A |
| TcI/IIa-Texas Theis | • | • | • | • | ••• | •• | •• | A | G | G | • | • | • | • | A | • | • | A |
| TcI/IIa-Griffin Dog | • | • | • | • | ••• | •• | •• | A | R | K | • | K | S | Y | R | R | • | A |
| Amino acid change | E→A | E→A | Y→W | K→Y | E→K | L→E | S→A | A→T | ||||||||||
Genotype of each isolate precedes the isolate name. Nucleotide positions correspond to sites from P209 (Genbank EF065175). Dots represent nucleotide site identical to reference strain (either P209 for TcI or CANIII cl1 for TcIV). Dashes represent missing nucleotides.
The following 17 US TcI sequences were identical: Human isolates (TC CC, CA R), domestic dogs (USA Dog Y), Virginia opossums (USA Opossum, Opossum 1970, 92101601P cl2, FH4, 93070103P cl2, FL Opo 3, FL Opo 15), armadillos (Armadillo 1973, USA Armadillo), triatomine bugs (Florida C1F8, Florida), and raccoons (GA Rac 143, 93053103R cl3, FL Rac 13).
The following 26 US TcIV sequences were identical: Raccoons (STC 10R cl3, FL Rac 9, 92122102R, 93071502R cl2, 93040701R cl1, 93072805R cl3, FL Rac 15, FL Rac 46, FL Rac 5, FL Rac 30, GA Rac 134, GA Rac 69, GA Rac 107, Maryland Rac, STC 35R), domestic dogs (Samantha Dog, Caesar Dog, Dog Theis, OK Dog, Smokey), ring-tailed lemurs (Clarence, Meg, Nilda), striped skunk (GA Sk 1), triatomine bug (T sang5 cl1), and armadillo (GA Arm 20).
Figure 1Evolutionary relationships among mismatch-repair class 2 gene (MSH2) and the thiol-disulfide oxido-reductase Tc52 gene (Tc52) from 50 and 51 Trypanosoma cruzi isolates, respectively.
Three phylogenetic trees were created by neighbor-joining (NJ), minimum evolution (ME), and maximum parsimony (MP) methods from the alignment of each gene target and a consensus tree was interpreted. Numbers at the branches are bootstrap values >50% (500 replicates) for the same nodes of the NJ, ME, MP trees. Evolutionary distances were computed using the Kimura 2-parameter method [29]. ▴ = the 17 US TcI isolates that were identical; • = the 24 or 27 US TcIIa isolates that were identical. * = reference strains: SilvioX10 cl1, Colombiana, P209 (TcI); X110/8 (TcIII); CANIII cl1, Dog Theis, Ecua6 (TcIV); CL Brener (TcVI).
Figure 2Evolutionary relationships among dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase (DHFR-TS) from 43 Trypanosoma cruzi isolates.
Three phylogenetic trees were created by neighbor-joining (NJ), minimum evolution (ME), and maximum parsimony (MP) methods from the alignment of each gene target and a consensus tree was interpreted. Numbers at the branches are bootstrap values >50% (500 replicates) for the same nodes of the NJ, ME, MP trees. Evolutionary distances were computed using the Kimura 2-parameter method [29]. The nine isolates with positions incongruent to the mitochondrial phylogenies (Fig. 3) are highlighted. * = reference strains. Sequences clustered in 3 clades: Clade 1 includes TcIV T. cruzi isolates from the US and reference TcIV and TcV S. America strains. T. cruzi isolates of TcI lineage from the US and reference strains clustered in Clade 2, while Clade 3 consists on TcII and TcVI S. American reference strains.
Figure 3Evolutionary relationships among cytochrome oxidase subunit II- NADH dehydrogenase subunit I region (COII-ND1) from 43 Trypanosoma cruzi isolates.
Three phylogenetic trees were created by neighbor-joining (NJ), minimum evolution (ME), and maximum parsimony (MP) methods from the alignment of each gene target and a consensus tree was interpreted. Numbers at the branches are bootstrap values >50% (500 replicates) for the same nodes of the NJ, ME, MP trees. Evolutionary distances were computed using the Kimura 2-parameter method [29]. The nine isolates with positions incongruent to the nuclear phylogenies (Fig. 2) are highlighted. * = reference strains. Sequences clustered in 4 distinct clades. Clade 1 contains exclusively US origin TcIV strains of T. cruzi. Reference TcIII-TcIV strains of T. cruzi clustered in Clade 2. TcI T. cruzi from the US and S. American reference strains clustered in Clade 3, while a separation of a TcII reference strain results in the fourth clade.