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Mitochondrial DNA characterization of populations of<i>Lutzomyia whitmani</i>(Diptera: Psychodidae) incriminated in the peri-domestic and silvatic transmission of<i>Leishmania</i>species in Brazil
77
Citations
23
References
1997
Year
GeneticsEntomologySensu StrictoZoological TaxonomyParasite GenomicsPhylogenetic AnalysisArthropod TaxonomyPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyEvolutionary TaxonomyPhylogeny ComparisonParasitologyMitochondrial Dna CharacterizationGenetic VariationPhylogenomicsLeishmania SpeciesPopulation GeneticsBiologyMitochondrial Dna SequencesNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologySilvatic TransmissionPhylogenetic MethodMedicine
Abstract A comparative analysis was performed on 18 mitochondrial DNA sequences, or haplotypes, of Lutzomyia (Nyssomyia) whitmani (Antunes & Coutinho) isolated by PCR from 28 individual flies originating from 10 Brazilian locations 150–2500 km apart. A phylogenetic analysis using maximum parsimony indicated support for three to four major lineages (Outgroups were haplotypes of Lutzomyia (Nyssomyia) intermedia (Lutz & Neiva)). One L. whitmani lineage was found in the Atlantic Forest zone of the North East, including the species' type locality, and is distinct from a second monophyletic group of haplotypes located in the drier interior of Brazil, stretching from the Tropic of Capricorn to Teresina just outside Amazonia. This provides no support for a previous hypothesis that L. whitmani sensu stricto is a single form widely-distributed south of Amazonia, and characterized by derived anthropophilic and synanthropic behavioural traits. The ranges of both lineages include populations incriminated in the peri-domestic transmission of Leishmania braziliensis sensu stricto. A third, Amazonian, group of haplotypes was less well-defined. It appears to consist of two sub-lineages which, like the two Leishmania species associated with them, are strictly silvatic and are separated by the Amazon floodplain. The zoophily of the Amazonian populations was not shown to be an ancestral trait. The geographical distributions of the Brazilian lineages are concordant with the broad patterns of bioclimate believed to have persisted since the late Tertiary period. These findings are part of ongoing research on the behavioural genetics of L. whitmani sensu lato aimed at understanding the evolution and maintenance of peri-domestic transmission of human cutaneous leishmaniasis.
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