Uniqueness and Phylogenesis of the Plague Microbe Yersinia pestis

被引:0
|
作者
Suntsov, V. V. [1 ]
机构
[1] Russian Acad Sci, Severtsov Inst Problems Ecol & Evolut, Moscow 119071, Russia
关键词
<italic>Yersinia pseudotuberculosis</italic> 0:1b; <italic>Yersinia pestis</italic>; peripatric speciation; phylogeny; phylogeography; evolutionary model; ecological scenario; PSEUDOTUBERCULOSIS; SPECIATION; EVOLUTION;
D O I
10.1134/S1062359024608139
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The phylogenies of the plague microbe (Yersinia pestis), reconstructed on the basis of an advanced molecular genetic (MG) approach, are not congruent with the facts accumulated by classical scientific areas: ecology, biogeography, paleontology, epizootiology, and others. The MG approach cannot name the original host of the plague pathogen and reliably characterize the root of the phylogenetic tree. This deficiency is compensated by the ecological (in a broad sense) (ECO) approach, which operates with such ecological, phylogeographic, and biogeographic categories as geographical population, subspecies, range, ecological niche, and direct kinship. Y. pestis, the "blood dweller" of warm-blooded rodent hosts, is transmitted through flea bites and is unique in the family of predominantly intestinal bacteria Yersiniaceae (Enterobacteriaceae). According to the ECO approach, its uniqueness is associated with the origin in the populations of its primary host, the Mongolian marmot (Marmota sibirica), in unique circumstances, in which the marmot population was infected with pseudotuberculosis not by the traditional alimentary way in grasslands, but in a traumatic way during hibernation. The identification of the original host of the plague pathogen opens up broad prospects for studying its evolutionary history (speciation and intraspecific diversification) and improving the methodology of ecological, geographic, phylogeographic, and phylogenetic studies of this especially dangerous pathogen.
引用
收藏
页码:1505 / 1514
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Two Novel Yersinia pestis Bacteriophages with a Broad Host Range: Potential as Biocontrol Agents in Plague Natural Foci
    Jin, Haixiao
    Zhong, Youhong
    Wang, Yiting
    Zhang, Chuanyu
    Guo, Jin
    Shen, Xiaona
    Li, Cunxiang
    Huang, Ying
    Xiong, Haoming
    Wang, Peng
    Li, Wei
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2022, 14 (12):
  • [32] Susceptibility to Yersinia pestis Experimental infection in Wild Rattus rattus, Reservoir of Plague in Madagascar
    Tollenaere, C.
    Rahalison, L.
    Ranjalahy, M.
    Duplantier, J. -M.
    Rahelinirina, S.
    Telfer, S.
    Brouat, C.
    ECOHEALTH, 2010, 7 (02) : 242 - 247
  • [33] Bacteriophages of Yersinia pestis
    Zhao, Xiangna
    Skurnik, Mikael
    YERSINIA PESTIS: RETROSPECTIVE AND PERSPECTIVE, 2016, 918 : 361 - 375
  • [34] Acquisition of yersinia murine toxin enabled Yersinia pestis to expand the range of mammalian hosts that sustain flea-borne plague
    Bland, David M.
    Miarinjara, Adelaide
    Bosio, Christopher F.
    Calarco, Jeanette
    Hinnebusch, B. Joseph
    PLOS PATHOGENS, 2021, 17 (10)
  • [35] The Role of Yersinia pestis Antigens in the Reception of Plague Diagnostic Bacteriophage L-413C
    Byvalov, A. A.
    Dudina, L. G.
    Kravchenko, T. B.
    Ivanov, S. A.
    Konyshev, I. V.
    Morozova, N. A.
    Chernyadiev, A. V.
    Dentovskaya, S. V.
    APPLIED BIOCHEMISTRY AND MICROBIOLOGY, 2024, 60 (04) : 740 - 748
  • [36] Quo vadis Yersinia pestis? The evolution of pathogenic species of the genus Yersinia
    Czerkies, Maciej
    Raczkowska, Adrianna
    Brzostek, Katarzyna
    POSTEPY MIKROBIOLOGII, 2009, 48 (03): : 181 - 196
  • [37] Genome rearrangements and phylogeny reconstruction in Yersinia pestis
    Bochkareva, Olga O.
    Dranenko, Natalia O.
    Ocheredko, Elena S.
    Kanevsky, German M.
    Lozinsky, Yaroslav N.
    Khalaycheva, Vera A.
    Artamonova, Irena I.
    Gelfand, Mikhail S.
    PEERJ, 2018, 6
  • [38] The Yersinia pestis Ail Protein Mediates Binding and Yop Delivery to Host Cells Required for Plague Virulence
    Felek, Suleyman
    Krukonis, Eric S.
    INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 2009, 77 (02) : 825 - 836
  • [39] Approaches for the Inactivation of Yersinia pestis
    Brady, Amanda
    Tomaszewski, Maggie
    Garrison, Taylor M.
    Lawrenz, Matthew B.
    APPLIED BIOSAFETY, 2024, 29 (04) : 221 - 231
  • [40] Phenotypic and Molecular Genetic Characteristics of Yersinia pestis at an Emerging Natural Plague Focus, Junggar Basin, China
    Zhang, Yujiang
    Luo, Tao
    Yang, Chao
    Yue, Xihong
    Guo, Rong
    Wang, Xinhui
    Buren, Mingde
    Song, Yuqin
    Yang, Ruifu
    Cao, Hanli
    Cui, Yujun
    Dai, Xiang
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 2018, 98 (01) : 231 - 237