Abstract

ABSTRACTGlobalization has facilitated the worldwide movement and introduction of pathogens, but epizoological reconstructions of these invasions are often hindered by limited sampling and insufficient genetic resolution among isolates. Pseudogymnoascus destructans, a fungal pathogen causing the epizootic of white-nose syndrome in North American bats, has exhibited few genetic polymorphisms in previous studies, presenting challenges for both epizoological tracking of the spread of this fungus and for determining its evolutionary history. We used single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from whole-genome sequencing and microsatellites to construct high-resolution phylogenies of P. destructans. Shallow genetic diversity and the lack of geographic structuring among North American isolates support a recent introduction followed by expansion via clonal reproduction across the epizootic zone. Moreover, the genetic relationships of isolates within North America suggest widespread mixing and long-distance movement of the fungus. Genetic diversity among isolates of P. destructans from Europe was substantially higher than in those from North America. However, genetic distance between the North American isolates and any given European isolate was similar to the distance between the individual European isolates. In contrast, the isolates we examined from Asia were highly divergent from both European and North American isolates. Although the definitive source for introduction of the North American population has not been conclusively identified, our data support the origin of the North American invasion by P. destructans from Europe rather than Asia.

Highlights

  • Illumina paired-end whole-genome shotgun sequences were obtained for 26 isolates of P. destructans from the North American white-nose syndrome (WNS) epizootic zone from the years 2008 to 2014, 5 isolates from Europe, and 3 isolates from Asia

  • Maximum parsimony analysis resulted in four trees with a low rescaled consistency (RC) index (RC of 0.4704), indicating a high degree of homoplasy that one would expect from a data set representing a long evolutionary history

  • The two genetic markers used in this study, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and microsatellites, provide complementary information regarding the phylogeography of P. de

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Summary

Introduction

Warnecke et al [41] hypothesized that P. destructans was a novel pathogen introduced to North America from Europe based upon evidence that North American little brown bats developed WNS when inoculated with a European isolate of P. destructans. Their findings were further strengthened by Leopardi et al [28], who demonstrated genetic similarity, based on MLST, between the North American and some European fungal populations, indicating the likely source population for this introduction to be from Europe. The high mortality of North American bats infected with P. destructans is consistent with exposure of naive host species to a pathogen preadapted to similar hosts and environmental conditions

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