Origins and colonization history of pandemic Vibrio parahaemolyticus in South America
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Ansede Bermejo, Juan
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Origins and colonization history of pandemic Vibrio parahaemolyticus in South America
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Abstract
The dynamics of dissemination of the environmental human pathogen Vibrio parahaemolyticus
are uncertain. The O3:K6 clone was restricted to Asia until its detection along
the Peruvian coasts and in northern Chile in 1997 in phase with the arrival of El Nin˜o
waters. A subsequent emergence of O3:K6 strains was detected in austral Chile in 2004.
The origin of these 1997 and 2004 population radiations has not yet been conclusively
determined. Multiple loci VNTR analysis using seven polymorphic loci was carried out
with a number of representative strains from Asia, Peru and Chile to determine their
genetic characteristics and population structure. Asian and Chilean subpopulations were
the most genetically distant groups with an intermediate subpopulation in Peru.
Population structure inferred from a minimum-spanning tree and Bayesian analysis
divided the populations into two genetically distinct groups, consistent with the
epidemic dynamics of the O3:K6 clone in South America. One group comprised strains
from the original Asiatic population and strains arriving in Peru and Chile in 1997. The
second group included the remaining Peruvian Strains and Chilean strains obtained
from Puerto Montt in 2004. The analysis of the arrival of the O3:K6 clone at the Pacific
coasts of South America has provided novel insights linking the origin of the invasion in
1997 to Asian populations and describing the successful establishment of the O3:K6
populations, first in Peru and subsequently in the South of Chile owing to a possible
radiation of Peruvian populations.
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This study was funded by project ‘2007 ⁄ CP381’ from the Direccio
´n Xeral de Cooperacio´n Exterior, Xunta de Galicia.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/123975
DOI: doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2010.04782.x
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Molecular Ecology (2010) 19, 3924–3937
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