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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Morphological and genomic characterisation of the hybrid schistosome infecting humans in Europe reveals a complex admixture between Schistosoma haematobium and Schistosoma bovis parasites

Ingo BullaAnne RognonSantiago Mas-comaChristoph GrunauRonaldo De Carvalo AugustoMatthew BerrimanNancy HolroydAna OleagaCristian ChaparroAlan TraceyJérôme BoissierOlivier ReyJean-françois AllienneEve ToulzaJulien Kincaid-smith

subject

Schistosoma haematobium0303 health sciences030231 tropical medicineIntermediate hostSchistosomiasisBiologymedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationGenome3. Good health03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGenetic markerEvolutionary biologyParasitic diseaseVector (epidemiology)parasitic diseasesmedicine030304 developmental biologyHybrid

description

AbstractSchistosomes cause schistosomiasis, the world’s second most important parasitic disease after malaria. A peculiar feature of schistosomes is their ability to produce viable and fertile hybrids. Originally only present in the tropics, schistosomiasis is now also endemic in Europe. Based on two genetic markers the European species had been identified as a hybrid between the ruminant-infective Schistosoma bovis and the human-infective Schistosoma haematobium.Here we describe for the first time the genomic composition of the European schistosome hybrid (77% of S. haematobium and 23% of S. bovis origins), its morphometric parameters and its compatibility with the European vector snail and intermediate host Compatibility is a key parameter for the parasites life cycle progression. We also show that egg morphology (a classical diagnostic parameter) does not allow for differential diagnosis while genetic tests do so. Additionally, we performed genome assembly improvement and annotation of S. bovis, the parental species for which no satisfactory genome assembly was available.For the first time since the discovery of hybrid schistosomes, these results reveal at the whole genomic level a complex admixture of parental genomes highlighting (i) the high permeability of schistosomes to other species’ alleles, and (ii) the importance of hybrid formation for pushing species boundaries not only conceptionally but also geographically.

10.1101/387969http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/387969