Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/36939
Título: Adaptive potential of hybridization among malaria vectors
Autor: Mancini, Emiliano
Spinaci, Maria Ida
Gordicho, Vasco
Caputo, Beniamino
Pombi, Marco
Vicente, José Luis
Dinis, João
Rodrigues, Amabélia
Petrarca, Vincenzo
Weetman, David
Pinto, João
Torre, Alessandra Della
Palavras-chave: Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Genetics
Insect Science
Infectious Diseases
Immunology
SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
Data: 5-Jun-2015
Resumo: "Far-West" Africa is known to be a secondary contact zone between the two major malaria vectors Anopheles coluzzii and A. gambiae. We investigated gene-flow and potentially adaptive introgression between these species along a west-to-east transect in Guinea Bissau, the putative core of this hybrid zone. To evaluate the extent and direction of gene flow, we genotyped site 702 in Intron-1 of the para Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel gene, a species-diagnostic nucleotide position throughout most of A. coluzzii and A. gambiae sympatric range. We also analyzed polymorphism in the thioester-binding domain (TED) of the innate immunity-linked thioester-containing protein 1 (TEP1) to investigate whether elevated hybridization might facilitate the exchange of variants linked to adaptive immunity and Plasmodium refractoriness. Our results confirm asymmetric introgression of genetic material from A. coluzzii to A. gambiae and disruption of linkage between the centromeric "genomic islands" of inter-specific divergence. We report that A. gambiae from the Guinean hybrid zone possesses an introgressed TEP1 resistant allelic class, found exclusively in A. coluzzii elsewhere and apparently swept to fixation in West Africa (i.e. Mali and Burkina Faso). However, no detectable fixation of this allele was found in Guinea Bissau, which may suggest that ecological pressures driving segregation between the two species in larval habitats in this region may be different from those experienced in northern and more arid parts of the species' range. Finally, our results also suggest a genetic subdivision between coastal and inland A. gambiae Guinean populations and provide clues on the importance of ecological factors in intra-specific differentiation processes.
Descrição: PMID: 26047479 WOS:000355652200031
Peer review: yes
URI: http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84934942312&partnerID=8YFLogxK
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127804
ISSN: 1932-6203
Aparece nas colecções:IHMT: PM - Artigos em revista internacional com arbitragem científica

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