1. Histoplasma capsulatum Isolated from Tadarida brasiliensis Bats Captured in Mexico Form a Sister Group to North American Class 2 Clade
- Author
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José Antonio Ramírez, Maria Lucia Taylor, Tania Vite-Garín, Gabriela Rodríguez-Arellanes, María del Rocío Reyes-Montes, David S. Gernandt, Cristina Elena Canteros, Daniel Alfonso Estrada-Bárcenas, John W. Taylor, Lisandra Serra-Damasceno, Rosely Maria Zancopé-Oliveira, and Jorge H. Sahaza
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,QH301-705.5 ,Locus (genetics) ,Plant Science ,NAm 3 clade ,Article ,Coalescent theory ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tadarida brasiliensis ,Mormoops megalophylla ,new lineage ,Genetics ,bat host ,Biology (General) ,Clade ,Histoplasma capsulatum ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Genetic diversity ,biology ,concatenated sequence-types network ,030306 microbiology ,phylogenetic reconstruction ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Sister group ,Evolutionary biology ,Dimorphic fungus - Abstract
Histoplasma capsulatum is a dimorphic fungus associated with respiratory and systemic infections in mammalian hosts that have inhaled infective mycelial propagules. A phylogenetic reconstruction of this pathogen, using partial sequences of arf, H-anti, ole1, and tub1 protein-coding genes, proposed that H. capsulatum has at least 11 phylogenetic species, highlighting a clade (BAC1) comprising three H. capsulatum isolates from infected bats captured in Mexico. Here, relationships for each individual locus and the concatenated coding regions of these genes were inferred using parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian inference methods. Coalescent-based analyses, a concatenated sequence-types (CSTs) network, and nucleotide diversities were also evaluated. The results suggest that six H. capsulatum isolates from the migratory bat Tadarida brasiliensis together with one isolate from a Mormoops megalophylla bat support a NAm 3 clade, replacing the formerly reported BAC1 clade. In addition, three H. capsulatum isolates from T. brasiliensis were classified as lineages. The concatenated sequence analyses and the CSTs network validate these findings, suggesting that NAm 3 is related to the North American class 2 clade and that both clades could share a recent common ancestor. Our results provide original information on the geographic distribution, genetic diversity, and host specificity of H. capsulatum.
- Published
- 2021