학술논문

Genomic analysis of two phlebotomine sand fly vectors of Leishmania from the New and Old World.
Document Type
article
Author
Frédéric LabbéMaha AbdeladhimJenica AbrudanAlejandra Saori ArakiRicardo N AraujoPeter ArensburgerJoshua B BenoitReginaldo Pecanha BrazilRafaela V BrunoGustavo Bueno da Silva RivasVinicius Carvalho de AbreuJason CharamisIliano V Coutinho-AbreuSamara G da Costa-LatgéAlistair DarbyViv M DillonScott J EmrichDaniela Fernandez-MedinaNelder Figueiredo GontijoCatherine M FlanleyDerek GathererFernando A GentaSandra GesingGloria I Giraldo-CalderónBruno GomesEric Roberto Guimaraes Rocha AguiarJames G C HamiltonOmar HamarshehMallory HawksworthJacob M HendershotPaul V HicknerJean-Luc ImlerPanagiotis IoannidisEmily C JenningsShaden KamhawiCharikleia KarageorgiouRyan C KennedyAndreas KruegerJosé M Latorre-EstivalisPetros LigoxygakisAntonio Carlos A Meireles-FilhoPatrick MinxJose Carlos MirandaMichael J MontagueRonald J NowlingFabiano OliveiraJoão Ortigão-FariasMarcio G PavanMarcos Horacio PereiraAndre Nobrega PitalugaRoenick Proveti OlmoMarcelo Ramalho-OrtigaoJosé M C RibeiroAndrew J RosendaleMauricio R V Sant'AnnaSteven E SchererNágila F C SecundinoDouglas A ShoueCaroline da Silva MoraesJoão Silveira Moledo GestoNataly Araujo SouzaZainulabueddin SyedSamuel TadrosRayane Teles-de-FreitasErich L TelleriaChad TomlinsonYara M Traub-CseköJoão Trindade MarquesZhijian TuMaria F UngerJesus ValenzuelaFlávia V FerreiraKarla P V de OliveiraFelipe M VigoderJohn VontasLihui WangGareth D WeedallElyes ZhiouaStephen RichardsWesley C WarrenRobert M WaterhouseRod J DillonMary Ann McDowell
Source
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, Vol 17, Iss 4, p e0010862 (2023)
Subject
Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine
RC955-962
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Language
English
ISSN
1935-2727
1935-2735
Abstract
Phlebotomine sand flies are of global significance as important vectors of human disease, transmitting bacterial, viral, and protozoan pathogens, including the kinetoplastid parasites of the genus Leishmania, the causative agents of devastating diseases collectively termed leishmaniasis. More than 40 pathogenic Leishmania species are transmitted to humans by approximately 35 sand fly species in 98 countries with hundreds of millions of people at risk around the world. No approved efficacious vaccine exists for leishmaniasis and available therapeutic drugs are either toxic and/or expensive, or the parasites are becoming resistant to the more recently developed drugs. Therefore, sand fly and/or reservoir control are currently the most effective strategies to break transmission. To better understand the biology of sand flies, including the mechanisms involved in their vectorial capacity, insecticide resistance, and population structures we sequenced the genomes of two geographically widespread and important sand fly vector species: Phlebotomus papatasi, a vector of Leishmania parasites that cause cutaneous leishmaniasis, (distributed in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa) and Lutzomyia longipalpis, a vector of Leishmania parasites that cause visceral leishmaniasis (distributed across Central and South America). We categorized and curated genes involved in processes important to their roles as disease vectors, including chemosensation, blood feeding, circadian rhythm, immunity, and detoxification, as well as mobile genetic elements. We also defined gene orthology and observed micro-synteny among the genomes. Finally, we present the genetic diversity and population structure of these species in their respective geographical areas. These genomes will be a foundation on which to base future efforts to prevent vector-borne transmission of Leishmania parasites.