Globally panmictic population structure in the opportunistic fungal pathogen Aspergillus sydowii

KL Rypien, JP Andras, CD Harvell - Molecular ecology, 2008 - Wiley Online Library
KL Rypien, JP Andras, CD Harvell
Molecular ecology, 2008Wiley Online Library
Recent outbreaks of new diseases in many ecosystems are caused by novel pathogens,
impaired host immunity, or changing environmental conditions. Identifying the source of
emergent pathogens is critical for mitigating the impacts of diseases, and understanding the
cause of their recent appearances. One ecosystem suffering outbreaks of disease in the past
decades is coral reefs, where pathogens such as the fungus Aspergillus sydowii have
caused catastrophic population declines in their hosts. Aspergillosis is one of the best …
Abstract
Recent outbreaks of new diseases in many ecosystems are caused by novel pathogens, impaired host immunity, or changing environmental conditions. Identifying the source of emergent pathogens is critical for mitigating the impacts of diseases, and understanding the cause of their recent appearances. One ecosystem suffering outbreaks of disease in the past decades is coral reefs, where pathogens such as the fungus Aspergillus sydowii have caused catastrophic population declines in their hosts. Aspergillosis is one of the best‐characterized coral diseases, yet the origin of this typically terrestrial fungus in marine systems remains unknown. We examined the genetic structure of a global sample of A. sydowii, including isolates from diseased corals, diseased humans, and environmental sources. Twelve microsatellite markers reveal a pattern of global panmixia among the fungal isolates. A single origin of the pathogen into marine systems seems unlikely given the lack of isolation by distance and lack of evidence for a recent bottleneck. A neighbour‐joining phylogeny shows that sea fan isolates are interspersed with environmental isolates, suggesting there have been multiple introductions from land into the ocean. Overall, our results underscore that A. sydowii is a true opportunist, with a diversity of nonrelated isolates able to cause disease in corals. This study highlights the challenge in distinguishing between the role of environment in allowing opportunistic pathogens to increase and actual introductions of new pathogenic microorganisms for coral diseases.
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