Genomes and geography: genomic insights into the evolution and phylogeography of the genus Schistosoma
Genomes and geography: genomic insights into the evolution and phylogeography of the genus Schistosoma
Blood flukes within the genus Schistosoma still remain a major cause of disease in the tropics and subtropics and the study of their evolution has been an area of major debate and research. With the advent of modern molecular and genomic approaches deeper insights have been attained not only into the divergence and speciation of these worms, but also into the historic movement of these parasites from Asia into Africa, via migration and dispersal of definitive and snail intermediate hosts. This movement was subsequently followed by a radiation of Schistosoma species giving rise to the S. mansoni and S. haematobium groups, as well as the S. indicum group that reinvaded Asia. Each of these major evolutionary events has been marked by distinct changes in genomic structure evident in differences in mitochondrial gene order and nuclear chromosomal architecture between the species associated with Asia and Africa. Data from DNA sequencing, comparative molecular genomics and karyotyping are indicative of major constitutional genomic events which would have become fixed in the ancestral populations of these worms. Here we examine how modern genomic techniques may give a more in depth understanding of the evolution of schistosomes and highlight the complexity of speciation and divergence in this group.
Animals, DNA, Helminth/chemistry, Evolution, Molecular, Phylogeography, Schistosoma/classification
Lawton, Scott P
ef087cf7-2a42-4c55-8711-6e62baa4a2b2
Hirai, Hirohisa
696fe726-fd3c-4914-badc-c1eaa2876850
Ironside, Joe E
7896b7fa-3e63-4909-ad6f-6f43048b85f5
Johnston, David A
b41163c9-b9d2-425c-af99-2a357204014e
Rollinson, David
917d0e09-176f-4058-89ff-ec2ad3a496ad
7 July 2011
Lawton, Scott P
ef087cf7-2a42-4c55-8711-6e62baa4a2b2
Hirai, Hirohisa
696fe726-fd3c-4914-badc-c1eaa2876850
Ironside, Joe E
7896b7fa-3e63-4909-ad6f-6f43048b85f5
Johnston, David A
b41163c9-b9d2-425c-af99-2a357204014e
Rollinson, David
917d0e09-176f-4058-89ff-ec2ad3a496ad
Lawton, Scott P, Hirai, Hirohisa, Ironside, Joe E, Johnston, David A and Rollinson, David
(2011)
Genomes and geography: genomic insights into the evolution and phylogeography of the genus Schistosoma.
Parasites & Vectors, 4, [131].
(doi:10.1186/1756-3305-4-131).
Abstract
Blood flukes within the genus Schistosoma still remain a major cause of disease in the tropics and subtropics and the study of their evolution has been an area of major debate and research. With the advent of modern molecular and genomic approaches deeper insights have been attained not only into the divergence and speciation of these worms, but also into the historic movement of these parasites from Asia into Africa, via migration and dispersal of definitive and snail intermediate hosts. This movement was subsequently followed by a radiation of Schistosoma species giving rise to the S. mansoni and S. haematobium groups, as well as the S. indicum group that reinvaded Asia. Each of these major evolutionary events has been marked by distinct changes in genomic structure evident in differences in mitochondrial gene order and nuclear chromosomal architecture between the species associated with Asia and Africa. Data from DNA sequencing, comparative molecular genomics and karyotyping are indicative of major constitutional genomic events which would have become fixed in the ancestral populations of these worms. Here we examine how modern genomic techniques may give a more in depth understanding of the evolution of schistosomes and highlight the complexity of speciation and divergence in this group.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 July 2011
Published date: 7 July 2011
Additional Information:
This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Keywords:
Animals, DNA, Helminth/chemistry, Evolution, Molecular, Phylogeography, Schistosoma/classification
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Local EPrints ID: 468895
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468895
ISSN: 1756-3305
PURE UUID: 0595ca16-c5e1-4b59-8c5a-9317a6c69de9
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Date deposited: 31 Aug 2022 16:53
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:11
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Author:
Scott P Lawton
Author:
Hirohisa Hirai
Author:
Joe E Ironside
Author:
David A Johnston
Author:
David Rollinson
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