Dual African Origins of Global Aedes aegypti s.l. Populations Revealed by Mitochondrial DNA

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Date
2013Author
Moore, Michelle
Sylla, Massamba
Goss, Laura
Burugu, Marion Warigia
Sang, Rosemary
Kamau, Luna W
Kenya, Eucharia Unoma
Bosio, Chris
Munoz, Maria de Lourdes
Sharakova, Maria
Black, William Cormack
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Background: Aedes aegypti is the primary global vector to humans of yellow fever and dengue flaviviruses. Over the past 50
years, many population genetic studies have documented large genetic differences among global populations of this
species. These studies initially used morphological polymorphisms, followed later by allozymes, and most recently various
molecular genetic markers including microsatellites and mitochondrial markers. In particular, since 2000, fourteen
publications and four unpublished datasets have used sequence data from the NADH dehydrogenase subunit 4
mitochondrial gene to compare Ae. aegypti collections and collectively 95 unique mtDNA haplotypes have been found.
Phylogenetic analyses in these many studies consistently resolved two clades but no comprehensive study of mtDNA
haplotypes have been made in Africa, the continent in which the species originated.
Methods and Findings: ND4 haplotypes were sequenced in 426 Ae. aegypti s.l. from Senegal, West Africa and Kenya, East
Africa. In Senegal 15 and in Kenya 7 new haplotypes were discovered. When added to the 95 published haplotypes and
including 6 African Aedes species as outgroups, phylogenetic analyses showed that all but one Senegal haplotype occurred
in a basal clade while most East African haplotypes occurred in a second clade arising from the basal clade. Globally
distributed haplotypes occurred in both clades demonstrating that populations outside Africa consist of mixtures of
mosquitoes from both clades.
Conclusions: Populations of Ae. aegypti outside Africa consist of mosquitoes arising from one of two ancestral clades. One
clade is basal and primarily associated with West Africa while the second arises from the first and contains primarily
mosquitoes from East Africa