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      Unequivocal Identification of Subpopulations in Putative Multiclonal Trypanosoma cruzi Strains by FACs Single Cell Sorting and Genotyping

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          Abstract

          Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas disease, is a polymorphic species. Evidence suggests that the majority of the T. cruzi populations isolated from afflicted humans, reservoir animals, or vectors are multiclonal. However, the extent and the complexity of multiclonality remain to be established, since aneuploidy cannot be excluded and current conventional cloning methods cannot identify all the representative clones in an infection. To answer this question, we adapted a methodology originally described for analyzing single spermatozoids, to isolate and study single T. cruzi parasites. Accordingly, the cloning apparatus of a Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorter (FACS) was used to sort single T. cruzi cells directly into 96-wells microplates. Cells were then genotyped using two polymorphic genomic markers and four microsatellite loci. We validated this methodology by testing four T. cruzi populations: one control artificial mixture composed of two monoclonal populations – Silvio X10 cl1 (TcI) and Esmeraldo cl3 (TcII) – and three naturally occurring strains, one isolated from a vector (A316A R7) and two others derived from the first reported human case of Chagas disease. Using this innovative approach, we were able to successfully describe the whole complexity of these natural strains, revealing their multiclonal status. In addition, our results demonstrate that these T. cruzi populations are formed of more clones than originally expected. The method also permitted estimating of the proportion of each subpopulation of the tested strains. The single-cell genotyping approach allowed analysis of intrapopulation diversity at a level of detail not achieved previously, and may thus improve our comprehension of population structure and dynamics of T. cruzi. Finally, this methodology is capable to settle once and for all controversies on the issue of multiclonality.

          Author Summary

          Trypanosoma cruzi, the cause of Chagas disease, is responsible for high levels of mortality and morbidity in many countries of Latin America. This species is very polymorphic and was recently classified into six discrete typing units (TcI-VI) that are associated with different geographical distribution, transmission cycles, and varying disease symptoms. Natural parasite populations are thought to have a complex structure since in endemic areas the same hosts may be simultaneously infected by different T. cruzi strains due to frequent exposure to insects as well as the variety of reservoirs and vectors in the sylvatic environment and the heterogeneous composition of the parasite populations. Most of the putative multiclonal populations have been suggested based on indirect evidence, or current conventional cloning methods that may favor some individuals' growth. In an effort to elucidate the complexity of T. cruzi isolates we adapted a methodology originally described for analyzing single spermatozoids, to sort single parasites. This approach allowed us to completely dissect the complexity of four strains and estimate the relative contribution of each subpopulation. Knowledge about complexity of T. cruzi strains is essential for determining the aspects involved in differential parasite tissue tropism, clinical manifestations of the disease, and drug resistance.

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          Mechanism of genetic exchange in American trypanosomes.

          The kinetoplastid Protozoa are responsible for devastating diseases. In the Americas, Trypanosoma cruzi is the agent of Chagas' disease--a widespread disease transmissible from animals to humans (zoonosis)--which is transmitted by exposure to infected faeces of blood-sucking triatomine bugs. The presence of genetic exchange in T. cruzi and in Leishmania is much debated. Here, by producing hybrid clones, we show that T. cruzi has an extant capacity for genetic exchange. The mechanism is unusual and distinct from that proposed for the African trypanosome, Trypanosoma brucei. Two biological clones of T. cruzi were transfected to carry different drug-resistance markers, and were passaged together through the entire life cycle. Six double-drug-resistant progeny clones, recovered from the mammalian stage of the life cycle, show fusion of parental genotypes, loss of alleles, homologous recombination, and uniparental inheritance of kinetoplast maxicircle DNA. There are strong genetic parallels between these experimental hybrids and the genotypes among natural isolates of T. cruzi. In this instance, aneuploidy through nuclear hybridization results in recombination across far greater genetic distances than mendelian genetic exchange. This mechanism also parallels genome duplication.
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            The molecular epidemiology and phylogeography of Trypanosoma cruzi and parallel research on Leishmania: looking back and to the future.

            Trypanosoma cruzi is the protozoan agent of Chagas disease, and the most important parasitic disease in Latin America. Protozoa of the genus Leishmania are global agents of visceral and cutaneous leishmaniasis, fatal and disfiguring diseases. In the 1970s multilocus enzyme electrophoresis demonstrated that T. cruzi is a heterogeneous complex. Six zymodemes were described, corresponding with currently recognized lineages, TcI and TcIIa-e--now defined by multiple genetic markers. Molecular epidemiology has substantially resolved the phylogeography and ecological niches of the T. cruzi lineages. Genetic hybridization has fundamentally influenced T. cruzi evolution and epidemiology of Chagas disease. Genetic exchange of T. cruzi in vitro involves fusion of diploids and genome erosion, producing aneuploid hybrids. Transgenic fluorescent clones are new tools to elucidate molecular genetics and phenotypic variation. We speculate that pericardial sequestration plays a role in pathogenesis. Multilocus sequence typing, microsatellites and, ultimately, comparative genomics are improving understanding of T. cruzi population genetics. Similarly, in Leishmania, genetic groups have been defined, including epidemiologically important hybrids; genetic exchange can occur in the sand fly vector. We describe the profound impact of this parallel research on genetic diversity of T. cruzi and Leishmania, in the context of epidemiology, taxonomy and disease control.
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              Ancestral Genomes, Sex, and the Population Structure of Trypanosoma cruzi

              Introduction The parasite protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi causes Chagas disease, a malady that afflicts almost 20 million people in South America and Central America, with more than 20,000 deaths reported each year [1,2]. Two different ecosystems exist for T. cruzi: one related to wild hemiptera and generally involving wild mammals (the “sylvatic” cycle), and another dependent on home-dwelling hemiptera and primarily involving humans and household animals (the so-called “domestic” cycle). The connection between the two ecosystems is made by infected rats, mice, bats, marsupials, and other feral mammals. It is estimated that the parasite emerged as a species well over 150 million years ago, originally infecting primitive mammals dispersed throughout Laurasia and Gondwanaland, regions that originated North and South America, respectively [3]. The first contact with humans occurred much more recently, in the late Pleistocene, 15,000–20,000 years ago, when humans first peopled the Americas—thus, Homo sapiens is a very recent new host for T. cruzi. There is convincing molecular evidence for the presence of T. cruzi DNA in mummies exhumed in Northern Chile and Southern Peru and dating as far back as 9,000 years before the present day. [4]. The conventional mode of transmission of T. cruzi to humans is by the feces of infected hematophagous triatomine bugs. Alternative modes of infection include blood transfusion, congenital transmission from infected mothers, and ingestion of contaminated foods. Thanks to intensive programs of triatomine control, vectorial infection has been virtually abolished in Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, and Argentina [5]. Moreover, improved screening of blood donors to reduce the likelihood of transfusional transmission and early detection and treatment of congenital cases have added to this success. It would be, however, a mistake to think that Chagas disease has been controlled. High levels of vector-borne transmission are still apparent in many areas, and several of the endemic countries have yet to develop serious large-scale surveillance and intervention programs [5]. Also, migrations of infected individuals offer a risk of new transmission in previously nonendemic regions, such as the United States [6]. Furthermore, the ancient and wide-ranging sylvatic cycle constitutes an enormous reservoir of parasites that represents a threat for humans. Recent studies have shown that in a nonendemic area of the Brazilian Atlantic coastal rainforest 50% of the triatomine vectors and of the marsupials Didelphis marsupialis and Philander opossum [7] as well as 52% of the golden lion tamarins and several other species of New World primates [8] were naturally infected with T. cruzi. Moreover, in the United States T. cruzi has been found in 11.4% of opossums and 22% of the raccoons, together with infected triatomine bugs in the state of Georgia [9]. In certain areas of that state 43% of the raccoons were infected [10]. Closer to the human domestic environment, Bradley et al. [11] have shown that 3.6% of the rural hunting dogs in Oklahoma were seropositive for T. cruzi. Human infection from the sylvatic environment can occur either from sudden migration of hemiptera to the human environment, forced by the destruction of forests [12] or by the ingestion of foods contaminated by the feces of hemipterae or by crushed insects [13,14]. Thus, a complete understanding of the population structure of T. cruzi, especially the sylvatic cycle, will be indispensable for controlling the disease. T. cruzi is diploid, with different-sized homologous chromosome pairs [15]. Its genome has been recently sequenced [16], and its size (diploid) has been estimated between 106.4 and 110.7 Mb. At least 50% of the T. cruzi genome is made up of repetitive sequences, consisting of large gene families of surface proteins, retrotransposons, and subtelomeric repeats. There is extensive and well-characterized intraspecific genetic diversity in T. cruzi (reviewed in [17,18]). Two major evolutionary lineages of the parasite, named T. cruzi I and T. cruzi II, have been identified [19]. These lineages are very divergent as revealed by several biological and molecular markers, including isozymes, 24Sα rDNA, and mini-exon gene polymorphisms [20]. T. cruzi I and T. cruzi II strains belong predominantly to distinct ecological environments: respectively, the sylvatic and domestic transmission cycles of Chagas disease [3,21]. T. cruzi I strains are characterized by zymodeme Z1 (a zymodeme is a group of strains that have the same isozyme profile), 24Sα rDNA group 2, and mini-exon group 2, and induce low parasitism in human chagasic patients. In contrast, T. cruzi II strains are characterized by zymodeme Z2, 24Sα rDNA and mini-exon group 1, and cause human infections with high parasitemia in classic endemic areas [21]. At least in Brazil, T. cruzi II strains appear to be exclusively responsible for tissue lesions in Chagas disease [22]. Additionally, there are some parasite strains that cannot be properly grouped into any one of these two major lineages. Among these unclassified strains are those identified as belonging to zymodeme Z3 [23] and other hybrid strains characterized as rDNA group 1/2 [24,25]. Using isozymes and random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) typing, Brisse et al. [26] proposed that T. cruzi II strains could be partitioned into five phylogenetic sublineages (IIa-e), each comprising one of the following reference strains: CanIII cl1 (IIa), Esmeraldo cl3 (IIb), M5631 cl5 (IIc), MN cl2 (IId), and CLBrener (IIe). In contrast, T. cruzi I strains could not be further subdivided. Within each of these clades or sublineages, there is extensive genetic diversity that can be unraveled by analyses with microsatellites and several other genomic markers (reviewed in [27]). Although capable of recombination in vitro [28], T. cruzi reproduces predominantly by binary fission and consequently its diploid nuclear genotype is transmitted en bloc to the progeny. Thus, the parasite presents extreme degrees of linkage disequilibrium, as shown through isozymes [29] and microsatellites [30], and exhibits a predominantly clonal population structure. Indeed, T. cruzi still has been considered the paradigm for clonal eukaryotic pathogenic microorganisms [31]. The occurrence of hybrid strains in natural populations of T. cruzi was suggested by isozyme analyses [32,33], restriction fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP) of housekeeping genes [34], RAPD [35], and genotype variations observed at chromosomal level [15,35,36], and has been confirmed using nucleotide sequences [37,38]. Their discovery proved that sexual events definitely have taken place in the past and have shaped the genetical structure of current T. cruzi populations. However, such genetic exchange events seem to have been rare enough to allow the propagation of clonal genotypes over long periods of time and wide geographical regions [35]. Because of the linkage disequilibrium, genotyping of nuclear markers in T. cruzi has thus far been limited to characterization of multilocus genotypes. Therefore, to understand the evolutionary history of the species it would be desirable to dissect the multilocus genotypes into their constituent haploid genome blocks. We wish to report that we have achieved this, revealing the existence of ancestral haplogroups and repeated hybridization events in T. cruzi. Results We have typed 75 strains of T. cruzi (Table 1) with five nuclear CA-repeat microsatellites (Table S1). We assumed a stepwise mutation model for the evolution of microsatellites and used the minimum number of mutational steps necessary to transform one strain microsatellite profile into another to build a genetic distance matrix. The multidimensional scaling (MDS) plot shown in Figure 1 provided, with excellent fit (stress = 0.08), a visual representation of the distance matrix. Four clusters are clearly visible and identified by ellipsoids in the MDS plot. The identity of the clusters is revealed by the presence of the prototypical strains of Brisse et al. [26]: MDS-cluster A corresponds to T. cruzi I, MDS-cluster C to T. cruzi IIb, MDS-cluster B to T. cruzi IIc, and MDS-cluster BH to the IId and IIe sublineages. Only three strains fell outside the four clusters: CanIII (sub-lineage IIa), Dog Theis, and 402. In 41 of the 75 strains we sequenced a 290–base pair region of the maxicircle-encoded cytochrome oxidase subunit II (COII) gene encompassing 44 variable positions (Figure 2). The sequenced data were used to generate a neighbor-joining (NJ) tree that is shown in Figure 3. It is clear that there are three tightly clustered sets of strains, separated by very large genetic distances, permitting straightforward allocation of T. cruzi strains into three mitochondrial clades that can also be simply identified by variation in just two AluI RFLP sites (Figure 2), which were then scored for all 75 strains (Table 2). Our MDS clusters corresponded perfectly to these mitochondrial clades, with the exceptions of MDS-clusters B (sublineage IIc) and BH (thus called because it contains the hybrid sublineages IId and IIe), both of which fall within mitochondrial clade B. To confirm our finding, we also built NJ trees for sequences obtained from GenBank of two other mitochondrial genes, cytochrome b (CYb) [35] and NADH dehydrogenase subunit 1 (ND1) [37]. The CYb and ND1 trees had very similar topology to that of the COII tree (all with extremely high bootstrap values for the three main branches), confirming that sublineages IIc, IId, and IIe indeed belong to the same mitochondrial clade (Figure 3). We tested this notion further using analysis of molecular variance [39]. By partitioning the variability within and between mitochondrial clades we found that for COII, CYb, and ND1, respectively, 97%, 91%, and 68% of the genetic variability was found among clades. We also typed all strains for the polymorphism of the D7 divergent domain of the 24Sα rRNA gene (Table S1) and combined the results with the microsatellites into multilocus genotypes that were analyzed with the PHASE software [40]. We identified 141 different haplotypes corresponding to a haplotypic diversity of 0.993. The identified haplotypes were then subjected to a median joining analysis using the NETWORK 3.1 software [41]. The resulting multitude of plausible trees is best expressed by a network that displays alternative potential evolutionary paths (Figure 4). Three haplotypic clusters are clearly identifiable: we called them haplogroups X, Y, and Z. Within these haplotypic clusters there is extensive reticulation because of the stepwise recurrent nature of microsatellite mutations [42]. However, the three haplogroups are connected by long and unique paths, emphasizing the great genetic distance between them. Seven haplotypes (numbers 33, 35, 58, 59, 60, 61, and 63) belong to these “bridges” and hence could not be assigned to any of the haplogroups—they were lumped into a haplogroup “I” (for indeterminate). We could then assign to each of the 75 strains a haplogroup genotype (Table 2). All strains belonging to the T. cruzi I lineage (MDS-cluster A in Figure 1) proved to be Z/Z (i.e., had two haplotypes belonging to haplogroup Z). Likewise, all the strains in MDS-cluster C (Figure 1) had Y/Y genotypes and those in MDS-cluster B had X/X genotypes. The strains in cluster BH all had X/Y genotypes confirming their hybrid nature. Strains Can III (genotype I/I, COII B), Dog Theis (genotype I/I, COII C), 402, and Mas1cl1 (both genotype I/Y, COII C), and M6241cl16 (genotype I/X, COII B) presented haplotypes of haplogroup I. It is noteworthy that three of these five strains are the ones outside MDS clusters in Figure 1A. Discussion The population structure of T. cruzi is far from being completely understood. Although the existence of two major lineages in this species is well accepted, uncertainties about the existence or not of a third major ancestral group have been raised [15,35,36]. For instance, strains belonging to zymodeme Z3 or to rDNA group 1/2 could not be classified into either T. cruzi I or T. cruzi II [19]. Likewise, other strains (such as SC43) that present incongruities between the rDNA (group 2) and mini-exon (group 1) typing cannot be allocated into any of the two major lineages [24]. One of the major goals of this work was to investigate the genetic relationships among these “unclassifiable” strains. Our first strategy was to perform the phylogenetic analysis of T. cruzi populations by using microsatellite data. Albeit extremely variable, these DNA markers allowed us to reliably identify four significant major clusters of strains (MDS clusters A, B, C, and BH in Figure 1). MDS-cluster A corresponds to T cruzi I and MDS-cluster C to classical T. cruzi II or T. cruzi IIb as named by Brisse et al. [26]. MDS-cluster B contains strains classified as Z3 and assigned to the IIc sublineage [26]. Finally, the strains within MDS-cluster BH were known to belong to the putative hybrid isozyme clonets 39 or 43 as proposed by Tibayrenc [43] and later classified as IId and IIe sublineages by Brisse et al. [26] (see Table 1). Nucleotide sequencing and AluI RFLP analysis of a 290-bp stretch of the mitochondrial COII gene demonstrated that all strains enclosed in our microsatellite clusters B and BH (Z3 and hybrid strains) belonged to the same mitochondrial clade B. Sequences of two other mitochondrial genes, CYb [35] and ND1 [37], obtained from GenBank, amply confirmed this observation by showing that indeed hybrid strains (sublineages IId and IIe) and Z3 strains (sublineage IIc) were grouped together into the same mitochondrial clade B. This same conclusion had been reached earlier [35,37]. Gaunt et al. [28] have shown that the hybridization of T. cruzi strains involves only nuclear genomes, without mitochondrial fusion. Here, we clearly demonstrated that the mitochondrial clade B is a third major phylogenetic division of T. cruzi, distinct from T. cruzi I (mitochondrial clade A) and T. cruzi II (mitochondrial clade C) major lineages. We have also shown that the strains with hybrid molecular markers in their nuclear genomes have a distinct mitochondrial genome (genotype B). The analyses with all studied nuclear markers identified 141 different haplotypes that could be clustered into three haplogroups. All strains belonging to the T. cruzi I major lineage (MDS-cluster A in Figure 1) proved to be Z/Z (i.e., had two haplotypes belonging to haplogroup Z). Likewise, all the strains in MDS-cluster C (Figure 1) had Y/Y genotypes and those in MDS-cluster B had X/X genotypes. Thus, our data do not corroborate the suggestion made by Sturm et al. [36] that sublineage IIc (MDS-cluster B) is a hybrid. In contrast, the strains in MDS-cluster BH all had X/Y genotypes, confirming their hybrid character. Because of the way that PHASE identifies haplotypes, proximity of haplotype numbers is highly correlated with genetic proximity. Hybrid strains 167, 1022, 182, CLBrener, and Tulacl2 have, respectively, genotypes 4/99, 2/102, 5/108, 5/100, and 3/103, forming one group, while strains MNcl2, NR, SC43cl1, and SO3 have genotypes 52/133, 55/130, 54/129, and 54/130, and form another (notice equivalence with sublineages IIe and IId of Brisse et al. [26]). This indicates that at least two independent hybridizations occurred, presumably followed by clonal microdifferentiation. Based on these results we propose the following minimal scenario for the evolution of T. cruzi populations (Figure 5). In the distant past there were at least three ancestral clades (MDS clusters A, C, and B in Figure 1) that we may call, respectively, T. cruzi I, T. cruzi II, and T. cruzi III. It is interesting to note that this proposal matches the initial suggestion made by Miles et al. [23] almost 30 years ago on the basis of isozyme studies. Most likely, T. cruzi II and T. cruzi III had overlapping ecological niches, and thus the conditions necessary for hybridization were in place. At least two hybridization events produced evolutionarily viable progeny. In both events, the cytoplasmic donor for the resulting offspring (as identified by the mitochondrial clade of the hybrid strains) was T. cruzi III. From the haplotype reconstitutions we can estimate the parentage of a hybrid strain. For instance, CLBrener, the reference strain for the recently completed T. cruzi genome sequencing [16], has genotype 5/100. Its most likely mitochondrial recipient was a strain proximate to 1005 (genotype 100/106), while the most likely mitochondrial donor was a close relative of strains 222 and 115, which are very near each other in Figure 1 (arrowheads). The existence of strains that cannot be accommodated into this scenario (i.e., CanIII [sublineage IIa of Brisse et al. [26]] and Dog Theis) indicates that the evolutionary history had additional complexities. However, our simple model (depicted in Figure 5) should be useful for proposing and testing evolutionary and pathogenetic hypotheses. The fact that the same population structure of T. cruzi can be envisaged with different molecular markers, such as isozymes [23], RAPD [26,35], microsatellites [30], and several sequence-based nuclear [20,21,37,38] and mitochondrial ([35,37], this study) markers, bears witness to its extreme stability. Although, as shown conclusively in our study and also by others [35,37], hybridization events clearly did occur in the evolutionary history of T. cruzi, they seem to have been only occasional and to have been subsequently stabilized by strong clonal propagation (reviewed in [17,18]). Materials and Methods T. cruzi isolates. T. cruzi stocks (75) isolated from both domestic and sylvatic transmission cycles were analyzed (Table 1). DNA from the parasites were kindly provided by Dr. Égler Chiari from the Departamento of Parasitologia, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (Belo Horizonte, Brazil); Dr. José Rodrigues Coura and Dr. Ana Maria Jansen-Franken, from the Departamento de Medicina Tropical and the Departamento de Protozoologia, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), respectively; and Dr. M. Tibayrenc from the Centre d'Études sur le Polymorphisme des Microorganismes (Montpellier, France). Nuclear genetic typing. Amplification of five previously described microsatellite loci, denominated SCLE10, SCLE11, MCLE01, MCLF10, and MCLG10, was performed as previously described [30]. After the PCR, the amplified microsatellites were loaded on a 6% denaturing polyacrylamide gel and analyzed on an ALF sequencer (GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States) using the Allelinks software (GE Healthcare). To determine the allele size the samples were directly compared with the band sizes from an allelic ladder prepared by amplification of an artificial mixture of DNA from 60 T. cruzi strains. Amplification of the D7 divergent domain of the 24Sα rRNA gene was achieved by PCR with D71 fluorescent (5′-AAGGTGCGTCGACAGTGTGG-3′) and D72 (5′-TTTTCAGAATGGCCGAACAGT-3′) primers following protocols described previously [24]. The amplification products were also analyzed in ALF sequencer and allele sizes determined by the Allelinks software. Mitochondrial genetic typing. Amplification of the mitochondrial COII gene [37] was performed using the primers TcMit31 (5′-TAAATAATATATATTGTACATGAG-3′) and TcMit40 (5′-CTRCATTGYCCATATATTGT-3′). Total DNA (1–10 ng) were used in each PCR reaction in the following condition: 30 s denaturation at 94 °, primer annealing for 2 min at 48 °, and primer extension for 2 min at 72 °, in a total of 30 cycles. The amplified products were purified and sequenced using primer TcMit31 and the cycle sequencing with Thermo-Sequenase (ETKit; GE Healthcare) using the thermal cycling program recommended in the kit. The sequencing products were purified and run on a MegaBACE capillary sequencer (GE Healthcare). After Phred, Phrap, and Consed analyses, the sequences were trimmed to have equal length (290 base pairs). All bases sequenced had Phred values above 30 [44]. Based on the restriction map of COII sequences, the AluI restriction endonuclease was chosen to perform RFLP analyses in the mitochondrial COII gene. After PCR amplification, the amplicons were submitted to enzyme digestion for 16 hours according to instructions provided by the manufacturer (Promega, Madison, Wisconsin, United States). Digested products were analyzed on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver stained. Sequences for the mitochondrial CYb gene [35] and the ND1 (37) were obtained from GenBank. Construction of distance matrices, multidimensional scaling, and NJ trees. Based on the microsatellite results, a distance matrix between the strains was constructed as described previously [30]. In order to provide a visual representation of the distance matrix we used the multidimensional scaling plot using the software Statistica Version 6.0 [45]. Analyses of molecular variance for the mitochondrial sequences were performed using the Arlequin v.2.0 software using 1,000 permutations [46]. NJ trees were obtained separately for the COII, CYb, and ND1 sequences with the MEGA v. 3.1 software [47] using the Kimura 2 parameter and 500 replications for the bootstrap statistics. Haplotype inference and network construction. Haplotypes were reconstructed from the 75 T. cruzi populations by using a Bayesian coalescent theory-based method contained in PHASE software (Version 2.0.2 for Linux) [40]. The type of polymorphism (SNP or multiallelic with stepwise mutation mechanism for rDNA and microsatellite data, respectively) is taken into account in PHASE. For the analyses the default parameters of the program were used, with additional runs up to 10,000 permutations. These were the best-tested conditions, giving highly reproducible results. The resultant haplotypes were then arranged in a network by using the Median Joining analysis [41], available in NETWORK 3.1 software provided by Fluxus Technology (http://www.fluxus-engineering.com). Supporting Information Table S1 Typing of rDNA Group and Allele Sizes (in bp) of Five Microsatellite Loci (105 KB DOC) Click here for additional data file. Accession numbers The GenBank (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Genbank) accession numbers for the genes and gene products discussed in this paper are 24S rDNA (L19411), mini-exon gene (X62674), COII (AF359041 and DQ343715–DQ343753), CYb (AJ130921, AJ130931–AJ130938, AJ439719–AJ439727), and ND1 (AF359009, AF359011–AF359029, AF359031–AF359053).
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                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                PLoS Negl Trop Dis
                PLoS Negl Trop Dis
                plos
                plosntds
                PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1935-2727
                1935-2735
                July 2012
                10 July 2012
                : 6
                : 7
                : e1722
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Departamento de Bioquímica e Imunologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil
                [2 ]Universidade Federal de São João del-Rey, Campus Centro-Oeste Dona Lindu, Divinópolis, Minas Gerais, Brazil
                [3 ]Departamento de Análises Clínicas, Escola de Farmácia, Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto, Ouro Preto, Minas Gerais, Brazil
                [4 ]Departamento de Ciências Básicas da Saúde, Universidade Estadual de Maringá, Maringá, Paraná, Brazil
                [5 ]Departamento de Parasitologia, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil
                [6 ]Instituto de Ensino e Pesquisa da Santa Casa de Belo Horizonte, Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil
                [7 ]Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Instituto de Ciências Exatas e Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto, Ouro Preto, Minas Gerais, Brazil
                University of Pittsburgh, United States of America
                Author notes

                Conceived and designed the experiments: AMM SDJP CRM GRF. Performed the experiments: HMSV JRP. Analyzed the data: HMSV JRP MS AMM SDJP CRM GRF. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: AMM SDJP CRM GRF VMV MLG EC KJG MTB ML. Wrote the paper: HMSV MS AMM SDJP.

                Article
                PNTD-D-12-00157
                10.1371/journal.pntd.0001722
                3393670
                22802979
                414bc00f-ce48-473d-adb1-b116918cca5c
                Valadares et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 2 February 2012
                : 22 May 2012
                Page count
                Pages: 9
                Categories
                Research Article
                Biology
                Genetics
                Population Genetics
                Genetic Polymorphism
                Ploidy
                Microbiology
                Protozoology
                Parastic Protozoans
                Trypanosoma
                Molecular Cell Biology
                Nucleic Acids
                DNA
                DNA amplification

                Infectious disease & Microbiology
                Infectious disease & Microbiology

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