A Footworm in the door: Revising Onchocerca phylogeny with previously unknown cryptic species in wild North American ungulates

Published: 20 September 2024| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/yxr5gtgwjt.1
Contributor:
Matthew Kulpa

Description

Onchocerca is an important genus of vector-borne filarial nematodes that infect both humans and animals worldwide. Many Onchocerca species, most of medical and veterinary health relevance, are the focus of a variety of diagnostic and molecular research. However, despite the importance of these parasites, there is growing evidence of previously unexplored genetic diversity of these nematodes, particularly among wild ungulate hosts in North America. These understudied parasites prevent us from comprehending the evolutionary history of the genus Onchocerca, monitoring potential One Health threats, and improving our filarioid diagnostic capabilities. In order to fill these knowledge gaps, we identified five uncharacterized Onchocerca lineages and compared them to other well-known filarioid species using single and concatenated gene regions (i.e., nd5, cox1, 12S, 18S, 28S, hsp70, MyoHC, rbp1). Phylogenetic analyses revealed that the novel Onchocerca lineages of wild North American ungulates segregate into two clades. One clade comprised Onchocerca lineages II, IV, and V and other species found mainly in domestic animals and humans, and the second comprised Onchocerca lineages I and III and other species from a variety of hosts including cervids, bovids, and equids. The formation of two clearly separate clades supports the idea of at least two independent expansion events of ancestral Onchocerca species into the North American continent via the Bering land bridge. Cophylogenetic analysis shows evidence of ancestral Onchocerca species of Bovidae host-switching to wild Cervidae and giving rise to the novel Onchocerca species. Lastly, pairwise analysis confirms informative molecular markers of diagnostic relevance in both mitochondrial and nuclear gene regions of filarioid nematodes. The overall information provides greater context to the genus Onchocerca and emphasizes the need to discover, characterize, and monitor neglected parasites, especially those of wildlife origin.

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Institutions

Texas A&M University Central Texas Library

Categories

Parasitology, Phylogenetics, Biodiversity, Cervid, Nearctic Region, Parasite Genomics, Onchocerca, Vector-Borne Animal Disease, Molecular Parasitology

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