Molecular diversity of entodiniomorphid ciliate Troglodytella abrassarti and its coevolution with chimpanzees

  • Peter Vallo
  • , Klára J. Petrželková
  • , Ilona Profousová
  • , Jana Petrášová
  • , Katerina Pomajbíková
  • , Fabian Leendertz
  • , Chie Hashimoto
  • , Nicol Simmons
  • , Fred Babweteera
  • , Zarin MacHanda
  • , Alexander Piel
  • , Martha M. Robbins
  • , Christophe Boesch
  • , Crickette Sanz
  • , David Morgan
  • , Volker Sommer
  • , Takeshi Furuichi
  • , Shiho Fujita
  • , Tetsuro Matsuzawa
  • , Taranjit Kaur
  • Michael A. Huffman, David Modrý

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The entodiniomorphid ciliate Troglodytella abrassarti is a colonic mutualist of great apes. Its host specificity makes it a suitable model for studies of primate evolution. We explored molecular diversity of T. abrassarti with regard to large geographical distribution and taxonomic diversity of its most common host, the chimpanzee. We found a very low diversification of T. abrassarti in chimpanzees across Africa. Distribution of two types of T. abrassarti supports evolutionary separation of the Western chimpanzee, P. t. verus, from populations in Central and East Africa. Type I T. abrassarti is probably a derived form, which corresponds with the Central African origin of chimpanzees and a founder event leading to P. t. verus. Exclusivity of the respective types of T. abrassarti to Western and Central/Eastern chimpanzees corroborates the difference found between an introduced population of presumed Western chimpanzees on Rubondo Island and an autochthonous population in mainland Tanzania. The identity of T. abrassarti from Nigerian P. t. ellioti and Central African chimpanzees suggests their close evolutionary relationship. Although this contrasts with published mtDNA data, it corroborates current opinion on the exclusive position of P. t. verus within the chimpanzee phylogeny. The type of T. abrassarti occurring in Central and East African common chimpanzee was confirmed also in bonobos. This may point to the presence of an ancestral Type II found throughout the Lower Guinean rainforest dating back to the common Pan ancestor. Alternatively, the molecular uniformity of T. abrassarti may imply a historical overlap of the species' distribution ranges. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)525-533
Number of pages9
JournalAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology
Volume148
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2012

Keywords

  • entodiniomorphida
  • ITS
  • Pan troglodytes
  • SSU rDNA
  • Troglodytellidae

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