Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15820
Title: Ancient horizontal transfers of retrotransposons between birds and ancestors of human pathogenic nematodes
Authors: Suh, Alexander
Witt, Christopher C.
Menger, Juliana
Sadanandan, Keren R.
Podsiadlowski, Lars
Gerth, Michael
Weigert, Anne
McGuire, Jimmy A.
Mudge, Joann
Edwards, Scott V.
Rheindt, Frank E.
Keywords: Genomic Dna
Retroposon
Biodiversity
Bird
Evolution
Filariasis
Gene Flow
Genomics
Host Range
Nematode
Paleobiogeography
Pathogen
Phylogenetics
Prehistoric
3' Untranslated Region
5' Untranslated Region
Bird
Brugia
Consensus Sequence
Dna Sequence
Genome
Host Range
Nematode
Nonhuman
Open Reading Frame
Phylogeny
Polymerase Chain Reaction
Restriction Site
Retroposon
Sister Group
Transposon
Wuchereria
Wuchereria Bancrofti
Animals
Bird
Bird Diseases
Classification
Elephantiasis, Filarial
Evolution
Filariasis
Genetics
History
Gene Transfer, Horizontal
Human
Loa
Loiasis
Parasitology
Phylogeography
Retroposon
Transmission
Aves
Brugia
Hexapoda
Mammalia
Nematoda
Wuchereria
Animal
Biological Evolution
Bird Diseases
Birds
Brugia
Elephantiasis, Filarial
Filariasis
Gene Transfer, Horizontal
History, Ancient
Humans
Loa
Loiasis
Phylogeny
Phylogeography
Retroelements
Wuchereria
Issue Date: 2016
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Nature Communications
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 7
Abstract: Parasite host switches may trigger disease emergence, but prehistoric host ranges are often unknowable. Lymphatic filariasis and loiasis are major human diseases caused by the insect-borne filarial nematodes Brugia, Wuchereria and Loa. Here we show that the genomes of these nematodes and seven tropical bird lineages exclusively share a novel retrotransposon, AviRTE, resulting from horizontal transfer (HT). AviRTE subfamilies exhibit 83-99% nucleotide identity between genomes, and their phylogenetic distribution, paleobiogeography and invasion times suggest that HTs involved filarial nematodes. The HTs between bird and nematode genomes took place in two pantropical waves, >25-22 million years ago (Myr ago) involving the Brugia/Wuchereria lineage and >20-17 Myr ago involving the Loa lineage. Contrary to the expectation from the mammal-dominated host range of filarial nematodes, we hypothesize that these major human pathogens may have independently evolved from bird endoparasites that formerly infected the global breadth of avian biodiversity.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1038/ncomms11396
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