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首页> 外文期刊>BMC Biology >Population genomics reveals that an anthropophilic population of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes in West Africa recently gave rise to American and Asian populations of this major disease vector
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Population genomics reveals that an anthropophilic population of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes in West Africa recently gave rise to American and Asian populations of this major disease vector

机译:人口基因组学揭示了西非埃及伊蚊的嗜人种群最近引起了该主要疾病媒介的美洲和亚洲种群

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BackgroundThe mosquito Aedes aegypti is the main vector of dengue, Zika, chikungunya and yellow fever viruses. This major disease vector is thought to have arisen when the African subspecies Ae. aegypti formosus evolved from being zoophilic and living in forest habitats into a form that specialises on humans and resides near human population centres. The resulting domestic subspecies, Ae. aegypti aegypti , is found throughout the tropics and largely blood-feeds on humans. ResultsTo understand this transition, we have sequenced the exomes of mosquitoes collected from five populations from around the world. We found that Ae. aegypti specimens from an urban population in Senegal in West Africa were more closely related to populations in Mexico and Sri Lanka than they were to a nearby forest population. We estimate that the populations in Senegal and Mexico split just a few hundred years ago, and we found no evidence of Ae. aegypti aegypti mosquitoes migrating back to Africa from elsewhere in the tropics. The out-of-Africa migration was accompanied by a dramatic reduction in effective population size, resulting in a loss of genetic diversity and rare genetic variants. ConclusionsWe conclude that a domestic population of Ae. aegypti in Senegal and domestic populations on other continents are more closely related to each other than to other African populations. This suggests that an ancestral population of Ae. aegypti evolved to become a human specialist in Africa, giving rise to the subspecies Ae. aegypti aegypti. The descendants of this population are still found in West Africa today, and the rest of the world was colonised when mosquitoes from this population migrated out of Africa. This is the first report of an African population of Ae. aegypti aegypti mosquitoes that is closely related to Asian and American populations. As the two subspecies differ in their ability to vector disease, their existence side by side in West Africa may have important implications for disease transmission.
机译:背景埃及伊蚊是登革热,寨卡病毒,基孔肯雅热和黄热病病毒的主要媒介。人们认为这种主要的疾病媒介是在非洲亚种Ae时出现的。 aegypti formosus从人畜共患并生活在森林栖息地中演变成一种专门针对人类并居住在人口中心附近的形式。由此产生的国内亚种,Ae。埃及伊蚊在整个热带地区都有发现,大部分是人类的血液。结果为了了解这种转变,我们对从全球5个种群中收集的蚊子的外显子组进行了测序。我们发现了来自西非塞内加尔城市人口的埃及埃及人标本与墨西哥和斯里兰卡的人口更密切相关,而与附近的森林人口更不相关。我们估计塞内加尔和墨西哥的人口仅在几百年前就分裂了,我们没有发现Ae的证据。埃及蚊从热带其他地方迁移回非洲。非洲以外的迁徙伴随着有效人口规模的急剧减少,导致遗传多样性的丧失和罕见的遗传变异。结论我们得出的结论是Ae的家庭人口。塞内加尔的埃及和其他大洲的家庭人口之间的联系比与其他非洲人口之间的联系更紧密。这表明祖先是Ae。埃及逐渐发展成为非洲的人类专家,从而产生了亚种Ae。埃及埃及人。今天仍在西非发现该种群的后裔,当该种群的蚊子迁出非洲时,世界其他地区也被殖民。这是非洲Ae人口的第一份报告。与亚洲和美洲人口密切相关的埃及伊蚊。由于两个亚种传播疾病的能力不同,它们在西非的并存可能对疾病传播具有重要意义。

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