Abstract
Hybridization between different species of parasites is increasingly
being recognised as a major public and veterinary health concern at the
interface of infectious diseases biology, evolution, epidemiology and
ultimately control. Recent research has revealed that viable hybrids and
introgressed lineages between Schistosoma spp. are prevalent
across Africa and beyond, including those with zoonotic potential.
However, it remains unclear whether these hybrid lineages represent
recent hybridization events, suggesting hybridization is ongoing, and/or
whether they represent introgressed lineages derived from ancient
hybridization events. In human schistosomiasis, investigation is
hampered by the inaccessibility of adult-stage worms due to their
intravascular location, an issue which can be circumvented by
post-mortem of livestock at abattoirs for Schistosoma spp. of
known zoonotic potential. To characterise the composition of
naturally-occurring schistosome hybrids, we performed whole-genome
sequencing of 21 natural livestock infective schistosome isolates. To
facilitate this, we also assembled a de novo chromosomal-scale draft assembly of Schistosoma curassoni. Genomic analyses identified isolates of S. bovis, S. curassoni
and hybrids between the two species, all of which were early generation
hybrids with multiple generations found within the same host. These
results show that hybridization is an ongoing process within natural
populations with the potential to further challenge elimination efforts
against schistosomiasis.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e1010706 |
Journal | PLoS Pathogens |
Volume | 18 |
Issue number | 8 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 8 Aug 2022 |