PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Jun 2011)

Population genetics of Trypanosoma evansi from camel in the Sudan.

  • Bashir Salim,
  • Thierry de Meeûs,
  • Mohammed A Bakheit,
  • Joseph Kamau,
  • Ichiro Nakamura,
  • Chihiro Sugimoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001196
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 6
p. e1196

Abstract

Read online

Genetic variation of microsatellite loci is a widely used method for the analysis of population genetic structure of microorganisms. We have investigated genetic variation at 15 microsatellite loci of T. evansi isolated from camels in Sudan and Kenya to evaluate the genetic information partitioned within and between individuals and between sites. We detected a strong signal of isolation by distance across the area sampled. The results also indicate that either, and as expected, T. evansi is purely clonal and structured in small units at very local scales and that there are numerous allelic dropouts in the data, or that this species often sexually recombines without the need of the "normal" definitive host, the tsetse fly or as the recurrent immigration from sexually recombined T. brucei brucei. Though the first hypothesis is the most likely, discriminating between these two incompatible hypotheses will require further studies at much localized scales.