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Population genetic structure of a common host predicts the spread of white-nose syndrome, an emerging infectious disease in bats

机译:普通寄主的种群遗传结构预测白鼻综合征的传播,白鼻综合征是蝙蝠中的一种新兴传染病

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Landscape complexity influences patterns of animal dispersal, which in turn may affect both gene flow and the spread of pathogens. White-nose syndrome (WNS) is an introduced fungal disease that has spread rapidly throughout eastern North America, causing massive mortality in bat populations. We tested for a relationship between the population genetic structure of the most common host, the little brown myotis (Myotis lucifugus), and the geographic spread of WNS to date by evaluating logistic regression models of WNS risk among hibernating colonies in eastern North America. We hypothesized that risk of WNS to susceptible host colonies should increase with both geographic proximity and genetic similarity, reflecting historical connectivity, to infected colonies. Consistent with this hypothesis, inclusion of genetic distance between infected and susceptible colonies significantly improved models of disease spread, capturing heterogeneity in the spatial expansion of WNS despite low levels of genetic differentiation among eastern populations. Expanding our genetic analysis to the continental range of little brown myotis reveals strongly contrasting patterns of population structure between eastern and western North America. Genetic structure increases markedly moving westward into the northern Great Plains, beyond the current distribution of WNS. In western North America, genetic differentiation of geographically proximate populations often exceeds levels observed across the entire eastern region, suggesting infrequent and/or locally restricted dispersal, and thus relatively limited opportunities for pathogen introduction in western North America. Taken together, our analyses suggest a possibly slower future rate of spread of the WNS pathogen, at least as mediated by little brown myotis.
机译:景观的复杂性会影响动物的传播方式,进而影响基因流和病原体的传播。白鼻综合症(WNS)是一种引入的真菌病,已迅速扩散到整个北美东部,导致蝙蝠种群大量死亡。通过评估北美东部冬眠殖民地中WNS风险的逻辑回归模型,我们测试了最常见宿主,小棕褐鼠(Myotis lucifugus)的种群遗传结构与迄今为止WNS的地理分布之间的关系。我们假设,易感宿主菌落的WNS风险应随着地理位置和遗传相似性的增加而增加,反映出历史性与感染菌落的连通性。与此假设相一致,在感染和易感菌落之间包含遗传距离可显着改善疾病传播模型,尽管东部人群之间的遗传分化水平较低,但在WNS的空间扩展中捕获了异质性。将我们的遗传分析扩展到小棕褐鼠的大陆范围,可以发现北美东部和西部之间人口结构的强烈反差。遗传结构明显增加,向西移动到大平原北部,超出了WNS当前的分布范围。在北美西部,地理上最接近种群的遗传分化通常超过整个东部地区所观察到的水平,这表明扩散不频繁和/或局部受到限制,因此在北美西部引入病原体的机会相对有限。两者合计,我们的分析表明WNS病原体的未来传播速度可能会减慢,至少是由少量的棕色肌阵挛所介导的。

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