학술논문

Clonality, recombination, and hybridization in the plumbing-inhabiting human pathogen Fusarium keratoplasticuminferred from multilocus sequence typing
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
BMC Evolutionary Biology. April 26, 2014, Vol. 14
Subject
Population biology -- Health aspects -- Genetic aspects -- Research
Biological diversity -- Health aspects -- Genetic aspects -- Research
Ribosomal RNA -- Health aspects -- Research -- Genetic aspects
Phylogeny -- Health aspects -- Research -- Genetic aspects
Fungi -- Health aspects -- Genetic aspects -- Research
Language
English
ISSN
1471-2148
Abstract
Background Recent work has shown that Fusarium species and genotypes most commonly associated with human infections, particularly of the cornea (mycotic keratitis), are the same as those most commonly isolated from plumbing systems. The species most dominant in plumbing biofilms is Fusarium keratoplasticum, a cosmopolitan fungus known almost exclusively from animal infections and biofilms. To better understand its diversity and population dynamics, we developed and utilized a nine-locus sequence-based typing system to make inferences about clonality, recombination, population structure, species boundaries and hybridization. Results High levels of genetic diversity and evidence for recombination and clonality were detected among 75 clinical and 156 environmental isolates of Fusarium keratoplasticum. The multilocus sequence typing system (MLST) resolved 111 unique nine-locus sequence types (STs). The single locus bifactorial determinants of mating compatibility (mating types MAT1-1 and MAT1-2), were found in a ratio of 70:30. All but one of the 49 isolates of the most common ST (FSSC 2d-2) came from human infections, mostly of the cornea, and from biofilms associated with contact lenses and plumbing surfaces. Significant levels of phylogenetic incongruence were found among loci. Putative clonal relationships among genotypes were estimated, showing a mixture of large clonal complexes and unrelated singletons. Discordance between the nuclear ribosomal rRNA and other gene genealogies is consistent with introgression of ribosomal RNA alleles of phylogenetic species FSSC 9 into F. keratoplasticum. No significant population subdivision based on clinical versus non-clinical sources was found. Conclusions Incongruent phylogenetic trees and the presence of both mating types within otherwise identical STs were observed, providing evidence for sexuality in F. keratoplasticum. Cryptic speciation suggested in a published three-locus MLST system was not supported with the addition of new loci, but evidence of introgression of ribosomal RNA genes from another strongly supported phylogenetic species (FSSC 9), also known from plumbing systems and human infections, was detected in two isolates. Overall, F. keratoplasticum is a diverse and geographically unstructured species with a mixed clonal and recombinant life history. Keywords: Biofilm, Clonality, Fusarium, Hybridization, MLST, Mycotic pathogen, Population dynamics, Recombination
Author(s): Dylan PG Short[sup.1] , Kerry O'Donnell[sup.2] and David M Geiser[sup.3] Background Fusarium is a large cosmopolitan genus of filamentous fungi best-known for causing a plethora of economically important plant [...]