Literature DB >> 33775262

Historical contingency, geography and anthropogenic patterns of exposure drive the evolution of host switching in the Blastocystis species-complex.

Justin J S Wilcox1,2, John J Lopez-Cotto1, Hope Hollocher1.   

Abstract

Parasites have the power to impose significant regulatory pressures on host populations, making evolutionary patterns of host switching by parasites salient to a range of contemporary ecological issues. However, relatively little is known about the colonization of new hosts by parasitic, commensal and mutualistic eukaryotes of metazoans. As ubiquitous symbionts of coelomate animals, Blastocystis spp. represent excellent candidate organisms for the study of evolutionary patterns of host switching by protists. Here, we apply a big-data phylogenetic approach using archival sequence data to assess the relative roles of several host-associated traits in shaping the evolutionary history of the Blastocystis species-complex within an ecological framework. Patterns of host usage were principally determined by geographic location and shared environments of hosts, suggesting that weight of exposure (i.e. propagule pressure) represents the primary force for colonization of new hosts within the Blastocystis species-complex. While Blastocystis lineages showed a propensity to recolonize the same host taxa, these taxa were often evolutionarily unrelated, suggesting that historical contingency and retention of previous adaptions by the parasite were more important to host switching than host phylogeny. Ultimately, our findings highlight the ability of ecological theory (i.e. ‘ecological fitting’) to explain host switching and host specificity within the Blastocystis species-complex.

Keywords:  Blastocystis; ecological fitting; host specificity; host-switching; niche; zooanthroponosis; zoonosis

Year:  2021        PMID: 33775262     DOI: 10.1017/S003118202100055X

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Parasitology        ISSN: 0031-1820            Impact factor:   3.234


  1 in total

1.  Food security and emerging infectious disease: risk assessment and risk management.

Authors:  Valeria Trivellone; Eric P Hoberg; Walter A Boeger; Daniel R Brooks
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2022-02-16       Impact factor: 2.963

  1 in total

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