Ancestral Genomes, Sex, and the Population Structure of Trypanosoma cruzi
Jorge M. Freitas1; Luiz Augusto-Pinto1; Juliana R. Pimenta1; Luciana Bastos-Rodrigues1; Vanessa F. Gonçalves1; Santuza M. R. Teixeira1; Égler Chiari2; Ângela C. V. Junqueira3; Octavio Fernandes3; Andréa M. Macedo1; Carlos Renato, Machado1; Sérgio D. J. Pena1
1 Departamento de Bioquímica e Imunologia, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil; 2 Departamento de Parasitologia, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil; 3 Departamento de Medicina Tropical, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Acquisition of detailed knowledge of the structure and evolution of Trypanosoma cruzi populations
is essential for control of Chagas disease. We profiled 75 strains of
the parasite with five nuclear microsatellite loci, 24Sa RNA
genes, and sequence polymorphisms in the mitochondrial cytochrome
oxidase subunit II gene. We also used sequences available in GenBank
for the mitochondrial genes cytochrome B and NADH dehydrogenase subunit
1. A multidimensional scaling plot (MDS) based in microsatellite data
divided the parasites into four clusters corresponding to T. cruzi I (MDS-cluster A), T. cruzi II (MDS-cluster C), a third group of T. cruzi strains
(MDS-cluster B), and hybrid strains (MDS-cluster BH). The first two
clusters matched respectively mitochondrial clades A and C, while the
other two belonged to mitochondrial clade B. The 24Sa rDNA
and microsatellite profiling data were combined into multilocus
genotypes that were analyzed by the haplotype reconstruction program
PHASE. We identified 141 haplotypes that were clearly distributed into
three haplogroups (X, Y, and Z). All strains belonging to T. cruzi I (MDS-cluster A) were Z/Z, the T. cruzi II strains (MDS-cluster C) were Y/Y, and those belonging to MDS-cluster B (unclassified T. cruzi)
had X/X haplogroup genotypes. The strains grouped in the MDS-cluster BH
were X/Y, confirming their hybrid character. Based on these results we
propose the following minimal scenario for T. cruzi evolution. In a distant past there were at a minimum three ancestral lineages that we may call, respectively, T. cruzi I, T. cruzi II, and T. cruzi III. At least two hybridization events involving T. cruzi II and T. cruzi III
produced evolutionarily viable progeny. In both events, the
mitochondrial recipient (as identified by the mitochondrial clade of
the hybrid strains) was T. cruzi II and the mitochondrial donor was T. cruzi III.
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