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Diverse sampling of East African haemosporidians reveals chiropteran origin of malaria parasites in primates and rodents

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dc.contributor.author Holly, L.Lutz
dc.contributor.author Patterson, Bruce D.
dc.contributor.author Kerbis Peterhans, Julian
dc.contributor.author Stanley, William T.
dc.contributor.author Webala, Paul W.
dc.contributor.author Gnoske, Thomas P.
dc.contributor.author Hackett, Shannon
dc.contributor.author Stanhope, Michael J.
dc.date.accessioned 2017-05-19T09:51:40Z
dc.date.available 2017-05-19T09:51:40Z
dc.date.issued 2016-06
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/4777
dc.description Full text en_US
dc.description.abstract Phylogenies of parasites provide hypotheses on the history of their movements between hosts, leading to important insights regarding the processes of host switching that underlie modern-day epidemics. Haemosporidian (malaria) parasites lack a well resolved phylogeny, which has impeded the study of evo-lutionary processes associated with host-switching in this group. Here we present a novel phylogenetic hypothesis that suggests bats served as the ancestral hosts of malaria parasites in primates and rodents. Expanding upon current taxon sampling of Afrotropical bat and bird parasites, we find strong support for all major nodes in the haemosporidian tree using both Bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches. Our analyses support a single transition of haemosporidian parasites from saurian to chiropteran hosts, and do not support a monophyletic relationship between Plasmodium parasites of birds and mammals. We find, for the first time, that Hepatocystis and Plasmodium parasites of mammals represent reciprocally monophyletic evolutionary lineages. These results highlight the importance of broad taxonomic sampling when analyzing phylogenetic relationships, and have important implications for our understanding of key host switching events in the history of malaria parasite evolution. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Science direct en_US
dc.subject Malaria en_US
dc.subject Phylogenetics en_US
dc.subject Parasitology en_US
dc.title Diverse sampling of East African haemosporidians reveals chiropteran origin of malaria parasites in primates and rodents en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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