Abstract
Japanese macaque (Macaca fuscata) is an indigenous Old World monkey (OWM) species that inhabits the Japanese archipelago. There are two subspecies of Japanese macaque: Yakushima macaque (M. f. yakui) which inhabits Yakushima Island exclusively, and Hondo macaque (M. f. fuscata) which inhabits the mainland of Japan. Yakushima macaque is considered to be branched off from a certain parental macaque group that had inhabited the mainland of Japan. However, the process of sub-speciation of the Yakushima macaque is still unclear at present. In this study, to gain new insight into the process of sub-speciation of Japanese macaque, we utilized the simian foamy virus (SFV) as a marker. SFVs are found in virtually all primates except humans and undergo species-specific cospeciation with the hosts. The phylogenetic analysis of conserved regions of the env gene in SFVs remarkably resembled that of the OWMs with high statistical confidence. The phylogenetic analyses also indicated that there are four (1–4) genotypes among Asian OWMs investigated. SFVs derived from Asian OWMs except Yakushima macaque were classified as genotypes 1–3, whereas SFVs isolated from all Yakushima macaques and one Hondo macaque were classified as genotype 4. Interestingly, genotype 4 was firstly branched off from the rest of the genotypes, which might indicate that the macaques infected with genotype 4 SFV were derived from the “older” population of Japanese macaques. The high prevalence of genotype 4 SFVs among Yakushima macaque might reflect the possibility that they are a descendant of the population settled earlier, which has been geographically isolated in Yakushima Island.
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