Title
Adaptive Radiation of the Flukes of the Family Fasciolidae Inferred from Genome-Wide Comparisons of Key Species
Date Issued
01 January 2020
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Choi Y.J.
Fontenla S.
Fischer P.U.
Le T.H.
Costábile A.
Blair D.
Brindley P.J.
Tort J.F.
Mitreva M.
University of Texas Medical Branch
Publisher(s)
Oxford University Press
Abstract
Liver and intestinal flukes of the family Fasciolidae cause zoonotic food-borne infections that impact both agriculture and human health throughout the world. Their evolutionary history and the genetic basis underlying their phenotypic and ecological diversity are not well understood. To close that knowledge gap, we compared the whole genomes of Fasciola hepatica, Fasciola gigantica, and Fasciolopsis buski and determined that the split between Fasciolopsis and Fasciola took place ∼90 Ma in the late Cretaceous period, and that between 65 and 50 Ma an intermediate host switch and a shift from intestinal to hepatic habitats occurred in the Fasciola lineage. The rapid climatic and ecological changes occurring during this period may have contributed to the adaptive radiation of these flukes. Expansion of cathepsins, fatty-acid-binding proteins, protein disulfide-isomerases, and molecular chaperones in the genus Fasciola highlights the significance of excretory-secretory proteins in these liver-dwelling flukes. Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica diverged ∼5 Ma near the Miocene-Pliocene boundary that coincides with reduced faunal exchange between Africa and Eurasia. Severe decrease in the effective population size ∼10 ka in Fasciola is consistent with a founder effect associated with its recent global spread through ruminant domestication. G-protein-coupled receptors may have key roles in adaptation of physiology and behavior to new ecological niches. This study has provided novel insights about the genome evolution of these important pathogens, has generated genomic resources to enable development of improved interventions and diagnosis, and has laid a solid foundation for genomic epidemiology to trace drug resistance and to aid surveillance.
Start page
84
End page
99
Volume
37
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Parasitología Biología (teórica, matemática, térmica, criobiología, ritmo biológico), Biología evolutiva
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85078566441
PubMed ID
Source
Molecular Biology and Evolution
ISSN of the container
0737-4038
Sponsor(s)
Sequencing of the genomes was supported by the “Sequencing the etiological agents of the Food–Borne Trematodiases” project (National Institutes of Health— National Human Genome Research Institute award number U54HG003079). Comparative genome analysis was funded by grants National Institutes of Health—National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases AI081803 and National Institutes of Health—National Institute of General Medical Sciences GM097435 to M.M.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus