Ecological opportunity, evolution, and the emergence of flea-borne plague

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Abstract

The plague bacillus Yersinia pestis is unique among the pathogenic Enterobacteriaceae in utilizing an arthropod-borne transmission route. Transmission by fleabite is a recent evolutionary adaptation that followed the divergence of Y. pestis from the closely related food- and waterborne enteric pathogen Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. A combination of population genetics, comparative genomics, and investigations of Yersinia-flea interactions have disclosed the important steps in the evolution and emergence of Y. pestis as a flea-borne pathogen. Only a few genetic changes, representing both gene gain by lateral transfer and gene loss by loss-of-function mutation (pseudogenization), were fundamental to this process. The emergence of Y. pestis fits evolutionary theories that emphasize ecological opportunity in adaptive diversification and rapid emergence of new species.

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Joseph Hinnebusch, B., Chouikha, I., & Sun, Y. C. (2016). Ecological opportunity, evolution, and the emergence of flea-borne plague. Infection and Immunity, 84(7), 1932–1940. https://doi.org/10.1128/IAI.00188-16

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