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    Origin and diversification of the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni

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    Date
    2005
    Author
    Morgan, Ess A. T
    Dejong, Randall J
    Adeoye, Grace O
    Ansa, Ebenezer D. O
    Barbosa, Constança S
    Brémond, Philippe
    Cesari, Italo M
    Charbonnel, Nathalie
    Corrêa, Lygia R
    Coulibaly, Godefroy
    D’andrea, Paulo Sérgio
    De Souza, Cecilia Pereira
    Doenhoff, Michael J
    File, Sharon
    Idris, Mohamed A
    Incani, R. Nino
    Jarne, Philippe
    Karanja, Diana M. S
    Kazibwe, Francis
    Kpikpi, John
    Lwambo, Nicholas J. S
    Magalhães, Luiz A
    Makundi, Asanteli
    Moné, Hélène
    Mouahid, Gabriel
    Muchemi, Gerald M
    Mungai, Ben N
    Séne, Mariama
    Southgate, Vaughan
    Tchuenté, Louis Albert Tchuem
    Théron, Andre
    Yousif, Fouad
    Zanotti-magalhães, Eliana M
    Mkoji, Gerald M
    Loker, Eric S
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
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    Abstract
    Schistosoma mansoni is the most widespread of the human-infecting schistosomes, present in 54 countries, predominantly in Africa, but also in Madagascar, the Arabian Peninsula, and the Neotropics. Adult-stage parasites that infect humans are also occasionally recovered from baboons, rodents, and other mammals. Larval stages of the parasite are dependent upon certain species of freshwater snails in the genus Biomphalaria, which largely determine the parasite's geographical range. How S. mansoni genetic diversity is distributed geographically and among isolates using different hosts has never been examined with DNA sequence data. Here we describe the global phylogeography of S. mansoni using more than 2500 bp of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from 143 parasites collected in 53 geographically widespread localities. Considerable within-species mtDNA diversity was found, with 85 unique haplotypes grouping into five distinct lineages. Geographical separation, and not host use, appears to be the most important factor in the diversification of the parasite. East African specimens showed a remarkable amount of variation, comprising three clades and basal members of a fourth, strongly suggesting an East African origin for the parasite 0.30–0.43 million years ago, a time frame that follows the arrival of its snail host. Less but still substantial variation was found in the rest of Africa. A recent colonization of the New World is supported by finding only seven closely related New World haplotypes which have West African affinities. All Brazilian isolates have nearly identical mtDNA haplotypes, suggesting a founder effect from the establishment and spread of the parasite in this large country.
    URI
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-294X.2005.02709.x/abstract;jsessionid=882B9EB4E4EEE5E974CF41449D629176.d04t03?deniedAccessCustomisedMessage=&userIsAuthenticated=false
    http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/36288
    Citation
    Ess A. T. Morgan, Randall J. Dejong, Grace O. Adeoye et al (2005). Origin and diversification of the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni. Molecular Ecology Volume 14, Issue 12, pages 3889–3902, October 2005
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