Host-Associated Genetic Differentiation in the Face of Ongoing Gene Flow: Ecological Speciation in a Pathogenic Parasite of Freshwater Fish
Masoud Nazarizadeh, Milena Nováková, Jakub Vlček, Jan Štefka

TL;DR
This study shows how a parasite evolves differently in different fish hosts, even when there is ongoing genetic mixing.
Contribution
The research identifies genomic and transcriptomic evidence of ecological speciation in a parasite despite gene flow.
Findings
Parasites from bream form a distinct genetic cluster compared to those from other fish hosts.
896 SNPs under selection suggest immune evasion mechanisms drive divergence.
Transcriptome data reveal distinct gene expression profiles between parasite populations.
Abstract
Adaptive evolution in response to varying environments, leading to population divergence, is among the most intriguing processes of speciation. However, the extent to which these adaptive processes effectively drive population divergence amidst ongoing gene flow remains controversial. Our study addresses this by analyzing population genetic structure, gene flow, and genomic divergence between lineages of a tapeworm parasite (Ligula intestinalis) isolated from sympatric fish hosts. This parasite, which must overcome host immunological defenses for successful infection, significantly impacts host health. Utilizing genome-wide Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) and transcriptome data, we investigated whether host species impose distinct selection pressures on parasite populations. Genetic clustering analyses revealed clear divergence, with parasites from bream (Abramis brama) forming a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolution and Genetic Dynamics · Aquaculture disease management and microbiota · Parasite Biology and Host Interactions
