Login / Signup

Population genomics of ancient and modern Trichuris trichiura.

Stephen R DoyleMartin Jensen SøePeter NejsumMartha BetsonPhilip J CooperLifei PengXing-Quan ZhuAna Lourdes SanchezGabriela MatamorosGustavo Adolfo Fontecha SandovalCristina CutillasLouis-Albert Tchuem TchuentéZeleke MekonnenShaali M AmeHarriet NamwanjeBruno LeveckeMatthew BerrimanBrian Lund FredensborgChristian Moliin Outzen Kapel
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
The neglected tropical disease trichuriasis is caused by the whipworm Trichuris trichiura, a soil-transmitted helminth that has infected humans for millennia. Today, T. trichiura infects as many as 500 million people, predominantly in communities with poor sanitary infrastructure enabling sustained faecal-oral transmission. Using whole-genome sequencing of geographically distributed worms collected from human and other primate hosts, together with ancient samples preserved in archaeologically-defined latrines and deposits dated up to one thousand years old, we present the first population genomics study of T. trichiura. We describe the continent-scale genetic structure between whipworms infecting humans and baboons relative to those infecting other primates. Admixture and population demographic analyses support a stepwise distribution of genetic variation that is highest in Uganda, consistent with an African origin and subsequent translocation with human migration. Finally, genome-wide analyses between human samples and between human and non-human primate samples reveal local regions of genetic differentiation between geographically distinct populations. These data provide insight into zoonotic reservoirs of human-infective T. trichiura and will support future efforts toward the implementation of genomic epidemiology of this globally important helminth.
Keyphrases
  • endothelial cells
  • genome wide
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • single cell
  • dna methylation
  • machine learning
  • climate change
  • copy number
  • deep learning
  • artificial intelligence