Far-East Asian Toxoplasma isolates share ancestry with North and South/Central American recombinant lineages.
Fumiaki IharaHisako KyanYasuhiro TakashimaFumiko OnoKei HayashiTomohide MatsuoMakoto IgarashiYoshifumi NishikawaKenji HikosakaHirokazu SakamotoShota NakamuraDaisuke MotookaKiyoshi YamauchiMadoka Ichikawa-SekiShinya FukumotoMotoki SasakiHiromi IkadaiKodai KusakisakoYuma OhariAyako YoshidaMiwa SasaiMichael E GriggMasahiro YamamotoPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Toxoplasma gondii is a global protozoan pathogen. Clonal lineages predominate in Europe, North America, Africa, and China, whereas highly recombinant parasites are endemic in South/Central America. Far East Asian T. gondii isolates are not included in current global population genetic structure analyses at WGS resolution. Here we report a genome-wide population study that compared eight Japanese and two Chinese isolates against representative worldwide T. gondii genomes using POPSICLE, a novel population structure analyzing software. Also included were 7 genomes resurrected from non-viable isolates by target enrichment sequencing. Visualization of the genome structure by POPSICLE shows a mixture of Chinese haplogroup (HG) 13 haploblocks introgressed within the genomes of Japanese HG2 and North American HG12. Furthermore, two ancestral lineages were identified in the Japanese strains; one lineage shares a common ancestor with HG11 found in both Japanese strains and North American HG12. The other ancestral lineage, found in T. gondii isolates from a small island in Japan, is admixed with genetically diversified South/Central American strains. Taken together, this study suggests multiple ancestral links between Far East Asian and American T. gondii strains and provides insight into the transmission history of this cosmopolitan organism.